April 2, 2015 February 3, 2015 In Search of Mispricings Inside this Issue FEATURES Joseph Koster and Mathew Miller prove that an intense focus on the smallcap space can yield extraordinary values that are hiding in plain site. Investor Confidential: Boyles Asset Executing a value based investment approach with investments in EGI Financial, Zicom Group, and Cambria Automobiles. n PAGE 2 >> Investor Confidential: Saj Karsan Searching for value in unknown or unwanted businesses, and finding it in Alloy Steel, Data Group Ltd, and IWG Technologies. D PAGE 1 2>> Inside The Investor’s Mind: Breakdown and insight of a recent white paper by Joseph Calandro on Value Investing Principles. PAGE 16 >> Joe Koster and Matt Miller founded Boyle’s Asset Management in May 2013 based on the inspiration and principles of the Buffett Partnerships during the 1950s and 1960s. Which means they believe in pay for performance; and structured the fund in such a way that ensures incentive fees are entirely dependent on strong performance for their investors. Their value investing philosophy is complemented by their patience, long-term mindset and investment process. And although they have a broad mandate for investment, they pay particular attention to the small and micro-cap space (U.S. and select International territories) Currently, they are finding value in businesses in the small/micro cap marketplace. They are finding value in such industries as insurance, equipment manufacturing, and automobiles. See page 2 Value Revealed: Alliance One Shining light on a possible asymmetric risk/ reward scenario in a leading tobacco lead merchant. PAGE 19>> Editors’ Letter: Complex? . A PAGE 20 >> INVESTMENTS FEATURED INVESTMENT IDEAS Alliance One International Alloy Steel Cambria Automobiles Data Group Ltd EGI Financial IWG Technologies Zicom Group PAGE 19 13 10 14 7 15 8 Boyles Asset Management BoylesAsset.com Philosophy: Focused on acquiring equity stakes in companies at significant discounts to rationally determined assessments of intrinsic worth. Stick To The Basics! Saj Karsan believes that it is much easier psychologically to focus on companies with good/rational management teams. Saj launched Karsan Value Funds (KVF) in July 2009, a long-term oriented, value investment fund. The fund takes equity positions in public companies which trade at discounts to their intrinsic values and where downside risk is low compared to upside potential. The investment horizon of the fund is longterm nature, as it can take many years for such companies to return to trading at their intrinsic values. His value investing process continues to prove itself year after year. In 2013, his fund returned 38% (after taxes). And his fund outperformed the broad index in 2014 with a gain of 16% for the year. Today, Saj is finding value in in the smallKarsan Value Funds micro cap space. He’s finding value in such Philosophy: Establishes equity stakes in public companies trading at discounts to industries as document and marketing solutheir intrinsic values and where downside tions, aircraft water systems, and Arcoplate risk is low compared to the upside. manufacturing. See page 12 INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL Are Complex Adaptive Systems, Really That INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 Investor Confidential: Boyle’s Asset Management Boyles Asset Management explains why they focus more on identifying the moat of a business now, how they use continuous learning to keep their edge, how they were influenced by Munger, Buffett, Franklin as individuals, as well as investors, and why they see upside in EGI Financial, Zicom Holdings, and Cambria Automobiles. How did you get started in value vesting has evolved, I’m reminded of an answer Peter Bernstein gave to investing? Jason Zweig in a 2004 interview: “I Joe Koster: Matt and I first really make no excuses or apologies for learned about value investing at changing my mind. The world around Coastal Carolina University from a me changes, for one thing, but also I professor we both had, Dr. Gerald am continuously learning. I have Boyles. As you might be able to tell never finished my education and from the name of our firm, he had a probably never will.” My view of the huge impact on the course of our world continues to evolve and I’m lives and careers. He taught both an constantly changing how I look at investments class and a stock mar- things, and I think that will always be ket challenge class where he intro- so. duced value investing and Warren But when I first started, I probably Buffett to students, and even used focused too much on only looking for the book The Essential Buffett as the low P/E stocks or stocks with good textbook for one of the classes. returns on capital. Now, I’m probably While in college, Dr. Boyles also a little more skeptical overall, and was also the reason that Matt got in realize that low P/E stocks might be touch with Mike Pruitt. Mike was that way for a reason, and returns on looking for his next project and end- capital often mean revert. And stocks ed up hiring Matt and me right out of with higher P/Es and lower returns school to serve as analysts for the on capital on the surface can somenew company he was forming called times be the best investments if they Chanticleer Holdings. We were lucky are that way because management once when we crossed paths with teams are making the right investDr. Boyles, and got lucky again work- ment to increase long-term value at ing for Mike, who made sure to give the expense of short-term earnings. us all the resources he could for us In light of all of that, I’ve realized the to continue our education. After a importance of really focusing on year-and-a-half on the job, we one’s downside protection, either in launched a tiny fund with money the form of a moat, balance sheet from friends and family to start man- values, or some unique insight into aging public investments more for- the sustainability of earnings, bemally. And then in 2013, with the cause things aren’t always what they help of a sophisticated firm in Char- seem, and the future is sure to surlotte that we had gotten to know well, prise me at some point, no matter we formed Boyles Asset Manage- how deeply I think I’ve read and rement in order to focus our full atten- searched something. tion on the fund management business. What does your typical day look like from beginning to end? Has your view of investing evolved over the years? JK: On this topic, I’ve recently begun to read the book Daily Rituals: JK: As far as how my view of in- How Artists Work, and have really April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Boyles Asset Management On Giving Back Joe Koster gets inspired all the time simply seeing people performing acts of generosity to the world or even being useful to others. It’s no wonder his heroes include Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, and Benjamin Franklin. “I think they have been three of the greatest example of continuous learning throughout the history of the world, and I admire how much they’ve been willing to share their knowledge and improve the world around them,” he says, Joe and Matt even went as far as naming their new fund after the person who first introduced them to value investing, Dr. Gerald Boyles. “He had a profound impact on our professional lives. We were so pleased to honor that impact by naming the firm after him! He still lives in the Myrtle Beach area, and spending time with him when we make trips down there is always one of the best highlights of our year.” While they honor Dr. Boyles and his early influence, their view of investing has evolved over time. “I’ve realized the importance of really focusing on one’s downside protection, either in the form of a moat, balance sheet values, or some unique insight into the sustainability of earnings…” says Joe. Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 seen how people who have accomplished great things don’t really have a whole lot in common in their daily routines, at least not anything that can be seen as a universal type of rule. Their schedules and daily habits are personalized to their individual preferences and circumstances. As for me, I’m usually more of a morning person, and the routine isn’t the same every day. But on a typical day, I get up, grab a cup of coffee and start the day going through my memory palace for about 15-30 minutes (which I described in a blog posted titled “Memortation, or One Way to Put What You Learn to Practical Use”). I then read through a few things—books and/or some reminders and quotes I’ve compiled—that I consider the fundamentals of my investing philosophy. This usually takes anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour. I do this to make sure I stay on a disciplined path, as it’s all too easy for psychology and a good narrative to lead me, and probably most investors, astray at times. I then go through all my daily news and site feeds. As I’m going through them, I’ll email the things I find especially interesting to myself and link to them on my blog when I’m finished going through that process. I then go through my daily, automated stock screens that get sent to me (more on that below) to try and see if any ideas pop up that look especially interesting. The goal here is really not just to try and find new ideas, but to compare what shows up with the stock ideas I’m currently working on to see if there’s something worth working on instead. In effect, it’s part of the constant process of trying to increase the opportunity cost of how I spend my time. The time for news-related things and screens can be a bit unpredictable depending on how many interesting articles and companies show up in those processes, but after I’m finished with those, I turn my attention to whatever portfolio idea task is at hand, whether it’s researching what I think are the most attractive new ideas or keeping up with current portfolio holdings. I usually leave the office in time to have dinner with my wife about every night, and then usually have an hour or two before bed for something additional, which usually involves catching up on the Charlie Rose show, “60 Minutes”, or something else I’ve recorded, and then either reading, watching a video or lecture, or catching up on some podcasts. April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com ON CONTINUOUS LEARNING: My view of the world continues to evolve and I’m constantly changing how I look at things, and I think that will always be so. You mentioned that your heroes include Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, and Benjamin Franklin. What did you learn from them? JK: Besides the quality they all share of a lifelong commitment to continuous learning and improvement, they were—and continue to be in the cases of Buffett and Munger—all committed to giving back to society and leaving the world in a better place than when they entered it. They were all also quite skilled at figuring out what to avoid in life, or to put it as Munger often says it, “All I want to know is where I’m going to die so that I’ll never go there.” What are the top 3 books people don’t talk about, but that you would recommend to an investor? JK: I think Charlie Munger’s concept of developing worldly wisdom is hugely important, and besides the compilation of his thoughts and talks in Poor Charlie’s Almanack, I believe Peter Bevelin’s Seeking Wisdom: From Darwin to Munger is about the best place one can go to get an overview of the big ideas from the big disciplines. Two other books that I’ve made it a plan to reread every year are Nassim Taleb’s Fooled by Randomness and Howard Marks’ The Most Important Thing, which I also think are brilliant. What is your philosophy and process to investing? JK: I guess the best way to describe our philosophy is “global value investors.” We define value investing the way Munger has in the past, which is simply acquiring more than you are paying for. We will look anywhere, but our main focus is on the developed, English-speaking countries of the world, primarily the U.S., Canada, Australia, and the U.K. We can invest in companies of any size, but we’ve primarily focused on small and micro-cap companies given the greater number of chances to find mispricings for a fund of our size. We do utilize a large number of screens using Capital I.Q. as our research platform. We both have dozens of screens set up that run each week automatically, and in which we receive notifications when companies are either added to or removed from results. The screens are also pretty wide ranging. We have some for valuation or return on capital metrics, some for keyword searches in company filings, some for insider purchases, and so on. Other than screening, we basically try and get ideas by reading widely and building our network of people that we are close with and who share similar investment philosophies. Before investing in an idea, we usually spend at least a several weeks digging into it. Are there aspects to your research process that you would consider unique? JK: I’m not sure our process is all that unique compared to others like us, but I think in-depth research in general Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 is unique compared to the way most of the population invests. The one possibly unique thing we do is that normally one of us talks to management, while the other does not. This fits our own personalities better, but it also acts to balance the added understanding you can get from talking to management with the potential risk of having an enthusiastic CEO sell his company’s story well. It can become easy to get detached from the current numbers and potential risks that one should dispassionately consider before investing when in the presence of a charismatic executive, and that is a risk we take seriously. How important is it for you to have investors in the fund that share your focus on the long-term? JK: Having a long-term client base is certainly one of the most important advantages a fund like ours can have. There aren’t too many advantages one can gain over most in the market, but the ones we think are achievable and that we aim to have in place are: 1. Process - An almost obsessive focus on process over outcome, or in the lingo of Scott Adams, on systems over goals. It's okay to set big picture goals and you need to observe outcomes in order to assess and/or improve your process, but that is a small part of the day-to-day activity of focusing on your process and the things that within your control. and analyzing businesses. There is a lot of noise out there, and being able to clearly focus on making long-term decisions isn't always easy. After psychological mistakes, the inability to be patient and look past the short-term is likely the next major cause of investment mistakes, maybe even the biggest cause. 4. Structural - This is where having the right client base comes in. Having investors that understand our long-term focus and that understand our philosophy is a big advantage to achieving ON IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS: I think in-depth research in general is unique compared to the way most of the population invests. success over time. Investing is the type of business where one can and will underperform for significant stretches of time, so having an investor base that will stick with us through the ups and downs is very important. Do you have interest or expertise in a particular industry that you would call your “circle of competence”? Or are you more of a generalist in search of value or market inefficiencies? 3. Long-Term Thinking - Keep a longterm outlook when it comes investing JK: For the most part, we are generalist. We will look at anything that is simple enough that we feel we can gain an advantage over most people looking at it if we put in enough effort. To paraphrase Warren Buffett, we want to be able to narrow down what is important and what is knowable in each investment. We have to have some idea about what we need to know, and what we don’t need to know, while realizing that what we need to know can change as the price of an asset changes. And while we’d consider ourselves generalists, we April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com 2. Ego Elimination - Keeping your ego out of the investing process. If you don't keep your ego out of the process, you are much more likely to fall for the psychological biases that are likely the biggest cause of investment mistakes. You can't worry about looking good. You need to worry about finding out what is true and what is not. have had some decent success in the past investing in insurance companies, largely thanks to the expertise that Matt has developed in that space over the years. Describe your value discipline once you have arrived at an understanding of the Intrinsic Value of the business? JK: We tend to focus on the downside first. We want to invest in things where we think we have good downside protection, and where fairly conservative assumptions lead us to believe the stock will be worth at least double what we are paying for it in 3-5 years (or sooner), based on the earnings or book value we expect for the business over that time and the range of multiples we think are reasonable for the quality of the business, based on our own assessment as well as current private market multiples, if there are good comparables. Because the future is full of surprises, we try hard to understand the downside as well as the reasons the opportunity is presenting itself, instead of just focusing on the potential upside. Selling is usually more difficult. In general, we have a range of intrinsic value, but that range can be quite large. So we’ll usually tend to start selling some as it approaches the lowerend of our value estimate, and then sell out fully as it gets into the mid and upper end of our range. We’ll also sell earlier if we either have a better use for the cash, or if we realize we’ve made a mistake. How do you think about managing risk (for each investment and portfolio as a whole)? JK: We describe risk as both the probability and amount of potential loss on an investment. Trying to figure out the amount of potential loss is essentially what I was describing earlier when discussing our focus on Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 downside risk. Trying to handicap probabilities is harder, because you can’t get the precise odds of being right when it comes to investing. But there are traits to an investment that we try to focus on to improve our odds of success, even if we can’t quantify exactly how much those traits tilt the odds in our favor. These traits include things such as competitive advantages (moats), management teams with “skin in the game”, conservative balance sheets, downside protection in the form of tangible assets in the absence of moats, or buying from distressed or uninformed sellers, to name a few. If you did know the precise odds and payouts of a given investment, then you could use the Kelly Formula to determine optimal position sizes. And while that kind of precision isn’t possible investing in a focused portfolio of equities, we do believe using the Kelly framework is a good way to philosophically think about position sizing even in the absence of precision. For example, if you can consistently find ideas where you make 50% more when you are right than you lose when you are wrong, then even if you are right only 50% of the time, the Kelly Formula would say that the optimal position size on those investments should be 16.67%, or a total, fullyinvested portfolio of 6 positions. We are looking for traits that hopefully give us better than 50/50 odds, and are usually looking for about a 3-to-1 upside-to-downside ratio, which should hopefully provide us a little extra protection from being wrong. But even being conservative beyond that and assuming a ½ Kelly position size instead of a full Kelly position size would still yield a fully-invested portfolio of only 12 positions. So we think that range of 6-12 core positions is about correct for investors who are willing to put in significant amounts of work and only invest in their highest conviction ideas. We normally lean towards the higher end of having 10-12 core positions if fully invested to ac- count for some correlation among securities, and could consider having more than one stock make up a given position if the attractiveness of those stocks is about the same and the correlations between them are high. Of course, the odds and payouts change as prices change, and certain things may be being bought or sold over time, which can lead us to having a few additional positions. But in general, if we were fully invested, we’d expect to have 10-12 core positions, possibly less under the right circumstances. And if we can’t find things that April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com ON SELLING ...we have a range of intrinsic values...So we’ll usually tend to start selling some as it approaches the lower-end of our value estimate, and then sell out fully as it gets into the mid and upper end of our range. meet our standards of being high conviction ideas, then we hold cash and just keep on searching. The discipline to hold cash in the absence of the right opportunities is also a key aspect in how we manage risk. How do you handle currency risk, if at all? JK: We’ve thought about this quite a bit given that we do invest internationally. As of now, rightly or wrongly, we don’t hedge our currency risk. The studies we’ve seen show that it tends to move closer to evening out over the long run—more than five years— though there certainly can be some significant effects in the short run, as we experienced in our fund during 2014. Hedging adds another layer of complexity and layer of decisions to make and as of now, we are really focused on trying to find things where the undervaluation is so great that over time, even if the currency moves against us somewhat, we’ll still earn a good return if we are right in our analysis on the opportunity. But given that we also want to make sure that our ability to identify undervalued stocks shows up in our results, we are looking hard at implementing a hedging program if the cost to do so isn’t too great. As of now, we do think about how much exposure we have to a given currency and would consider pulling back from a country should we get closer to having an exposure of about 25% of our portfolio in a given foreign currency, and that percentage would likely be quite a bit lower if we were investing in lesser-developed countries. Are there potential areas of opportunity that investors should be aware of over the next 6-12 month and beyond? JK: Our timeframe is usually based by looking out 3 to 5 years at the businesses we are looking at, and we claim to know very little about anything that will happen in the next 6-12 months. But in general, we are still finding a lot more opportunity in international markets. Our work is based more on working from the bottom-up, but I think if you look at the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratios from around the world, it confirms the general view that the U.S. is one of the more expensive markets out there right now. When it comes to oil, and anything macro-related, I’m reminded of the Howard Marks quote: “It’s one thing to have an opinion of the macro but something very different to act as if it’s correct.” The big drop in the price of oil has certainly increased the number of energy-related ideas that are popping up on our screens. And while we tend to think there is a decent probability that the long-term price of oil will be much higher than the $50 or so it is at today, we don’t want any investment we make to have its downside protection depend on that, and so we’ve Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 a pretty careful and measured approach to looking at companies in that space so far. We’d love to take advantage of the volatility, but we want to make sure we have downside protection before putting capital to work, just in case energy prices stay subdued for an extended period of time. JK: As Warren Buffett has said, “ We don’t have to be smarter than the rest. We have to be more disciplined than the rest.” Discipline for us is sticking to our process, and continually trying to improve upon that process. And most of all, never forgetting what Ben Graham considered the three most important words in investing: margin of safety. Patience to us is simply giving an idea time to work out, and not letting emotions get in the way of selling too early when the facts are still in our favor. Patience is also being willing to hold cash in the absence of extremely compelling ideas. Right now for instance, our portfolio is weighted to approximately 50% cash. As you might imagine, that has hurt our relative performance significantly with US markets having advanced as they have over the past 18 months, but our process is to only act when we feel we have significant upside potential compared to our downside risk, and that process has driven us to hold a lot of cash in the current environment. Judgment is what happens when it is time to make the buy and sell decisions. It is something that I think will constantly be evolving over time. But constantly searching out additional information to make informed decisions, as well as analyzing past decisions—especially the bad ones—is an important part of what will hopefully be an evolution towards making better, and easier, judgment calls. What is the #1 mistake that inves- TMA also works with and negotiates tors make as it relates to investing directly with insurance carriers on behalf of the agents it represents and in general? benefits from some network effects JK: While I hinted at this a bit earli- because as each new agent is added er, I think the biggest mistakes inves- to the network, and as each agent tors make fall largely into the catego- grows its business, TMA improves its ries of: 1) Psychological; 2) Lack of bargaining position with the carriers. Patience; 3) Underestimating CompetiBecause there is a limited fixed intive Forces; and 4) Extrapolating the vestment to maintain the network, the Recent Past into the Future. company was earning very high reAt the top of that list for me are the turns on capital. We began buying psychological mistakes. There are so shares in July of 2007 at a price that many biases that can work against was just a slight premium to tangible investors that I think everyone is bound book value, in which cash made up a to make a psychological mistake at very large percentage of that book valsome point. Being aware of those bias- ue. TMA was also paying north of a es is something that I think is essential 5% dividend yield and had no debt. The company was extremely small ON DISCIPLINE back then and the type of valuation in Discipline for us is sticking to which we acquired shares is rarely our process, and continually try- possible outside the realm of the micro ing to improve upon that pro- -cap arena, and even then those types cess. And most of all, never for- of opportunities don’t come around getting what Ben Graham con- often. On top of the valuation, we were sidered the three most im- and continue to be extremely impressed with the CEO, Tim Klusas. portant words in investing: marWe realized we were looking at a 1gin of safety. foot hurdle with very little downside risk, so we put approximately 20% of to being successful over a long period our much smaller pool of capital into of time, because it is very easy to fool TMA’s stock at the time. The company yourself into doing something you basically just continued steadily grow shouldn’t do. As Richard Feynman its business, serve its customers, and said: “The first principle is that you return a decent amount of capital back must not fool yourself, and you are the to shareholders over the ensuing easiest person to fool.” years. Its core businesses remained pretty robust and profitable during the What was the best investment years following the crisis, and our total return, especially given our large alloyou’ve ever made? cation at the time, proved very rewardJK and MM: The Marketing Alliance, ing. Inc. (TMA) is probably the best investment we’ve made to date. The compa- I see you have a position in EGI Finy’s core business, and its only busi- nancial. Can you describe your ness at the time of our investment, is broader investment thesis? that it’s an aggregator for a network of small, individually owned and operated MM: We began buying EGI Financial insurance agents. TMA provides mar- at our prior firm, Chanticleer Advisors, keting support and back-office support in mid-2011 when the shares were that is crucial to the underwriting pro- trading between 60 and 70 percent of cess. The back-office support includes tangible book value. Our basic thesis technology and application processing. at the time was that the market was April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com How do you define the traits of Discipline, Patience, and Judgment as it relates to investing at Boyle’s Asset Management? Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 heavily penalizing the company for recent poor performance in the compa- INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT ny’s core non-standard auto business EGI Financial Price $15.80 in Canada and for efforts to diversify (TSE:EFH) 52-Week Range $11.80 — 17.00 into the US. Our belief was that the Description: Engaged in property and Dividend Yield 2.78% underwriting cycle was beginning to casualty insurance in Canada and Europe. Market Cap $185.26M improve in their core Canadian nonstandard business as regulatory presBasic Valuation: Largest Owners: % Owned sures began to recede and that the US P/OCF: 11.71 I.A. Michael Inv 19.36% exposure was a manageable effort. We believed there to be little downside P/TBV: 1.04 Co-operators Gen Ins 17.45% given the valuation even if things conTrailing P/E: 10.07 EdgePoint Inv 8.54% tinued to be difficult. Since that time, EFH STOCK PRICE HISTORY the company has been able to drive the core non-standard business, exited the nascent US effort, expanded into Europe, grew book value and repurchased some shares. We again bought heavily in 2013 when we launched Boyles at just over 75 percent of tangible book value. Our belief was that the company continued to be overly penalized by recent issues in the company’s niche Canadian business in Canada and the European efforts where premiums were growing quickly. Again we INVESTMENT SUMMARY judged the downside to be minimal Matt Miller believes, based on returns on equity, comparable valuations and under a variety of scenarios. transaction multiples, that a valuation in the range of 1.2x - 1.4x tangible book In terms of position sizing, prior to value is a reasonable expectation. That would value the shares at a bit over $20 the most recent move in 2015, the poand we think that value is likely growing at 8-12% per year depending on how sition was 9.4% of capital at December efforts in Europe continue to play out. 31, 2014. That tends to correspond with typical position sizing where we Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs), other public information judge there to be minimal downside and attractive upside. transaction multiples that a valuation in next few years in our minds are really the range of 1.2x - 1.4x tangible book two-fold from here: continued progress How are you looking at valuation at value is a reasonable expectation. in Europe and a potential acquisition of current levels? And how cheap do That would value the shares at a bit the business. The small insurance you consider shares at today’s over $20 and we think that value is space is a generally consolidating likely growing at 8-12% per year de- business and we suspect EGI could share price? pending on how efforts in Europe con- prove to be an attractive target, espeMM: Certainly with the recent moves tinue to play out. We have a tendency cially given the market position of their the shares are not as undervalued as to begin trimming positions in a small non-standard auto business. We think they’ve been over the last several way at around 90% of intrinsic value, further underwriting profitability and years. At about $16 per share, the though that is also clearly dependent proper reserving on the growing intershares trade at a modest premium of 4 on other opportunities that might be national business could also be a cata-5% on current tangible book value. In available. lyst. Results thus far have been admitour minds, the shares remain sometedly mixed, but the earnings potential what cheap on an absolute and rela- What catalysts do you see at these is quite substantial. tive basis. Importantly, we continue to levels for the next 1-3 years? If judge that there is minimal downside. any? What kinds of moats do you see in a We would expect, based on returns on company like EGI? equity, comparable valuations and MM: The primary catalysts over the April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 MM: As an insurance company there is really little to point to at EGI in terms of a moat. The company has a strong position in the Canadian nonstandard market, where it has a rich history that can provide some advantage but we would be fooling ourselves if we thought there was a strong moat. When it comes to management, that is certainly an important consideration when examining any business, let alone an insurance business. As is the history of underwriting. I think it is fair to say that the company has been better in some areas than other, but it does have a strong history of properly reserving. While we don’t expect a management change, if it was to happen, we’d naturally want to examine the incoming team before passing judgment. I will say it has been pleasant to see some insider purchases by the current team over the last couple years. Tell us about your position in Zicom Group? INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT Zicom Group (ASX: ZGL) Description: Equipment manufacturer and engineering service provider. Basic Valuation: P/TBV: P/OCF: Trailing P/E: Price 52-Week Range Dividend Yield Market Cap $0.22 $0.18 — 0.26 3.64% $47.4M .70 4.4 14.40 ZGL PRICE HISTORY INVESTMENT SUMMARY At current prices, Joe Koster believes that normalized earnings lie in the $7-10 million dollar range, which puts shares trading at only 6-7x earnings. On top of that, they are getting between a 3% and 4% dividend yield and it’s also trading at just under 70% of tangible book value. JK: Zicom is an industrial holding company based in Singapore and traded in Australia. It is composed of four main segments: 1) Offshore Marine, Oil & Gas Machinery; 2) Construction Equipment; 3) Precision Engineering & Automation; and 4) Industrial & Mobile Hydraulics (a small and immaterial segment). The Offshore segment provides equipment for offshore vessels as well some infrastructure projects and has been the big driver of profits as of late. The Construction Equipment segment manufactures concrete mixers and foundation equipment largely in Australia and Southeast Asia, and has been quite volatile lately given varying levels of constructions in those regions. The Precision Engineering segment is an outsourced manufacturing segment which also includes the company’s investments in medical technologies. These investments were made in the company’s quest to own instead of just manufacture products, and were made in businesses that the company believes will be disruptive to their respective industries. Our broad thesis is that we are partnering with a proven owner-operator at both a good multiple of normalized earnings, which are being masked by the medical technology investments, and at a price that gives us good downside protection at about 70% of tangible book value. The start-up investments in the medtech companies give us a lot of potential upside should one or more of them work successfully, but having them work is not something we think is required in order for us to earn a good return buying shares around this price. Currently, Zicom is April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs), other public information roughly a 7.5% to 8% position in the fund. With shares trading around .23 per share, how cheap do you consider shares at today’s share price? JK: Before the medtech investments really started to ramp up, Zicom was a business that was consistently earning double-digit returns on capital and earning about $7-10 million after-tax. The current market cap is about S$5055 million, and the current trailing earnings are just north of $5 million. So we think we are paying at most 10 times earnings for what we think is a decent business that is slightly under-earning, and probably more like 6-7... Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 times earnings what we think their core businesses are earning. This assigns no value to any earnings that could come from their medtech investments, which while they sound promising, are too hard for us to handicap whether or not they will eventually achieve commercial success. But given the multiples similar types of companies have been trading at recently, we like that we get that upside potential without having to pay for it. On top of that, we are getting between a 3% and 4% dividend yield, which is paid out of conduit foreign income and so is not subject to Australian withholding tax. We are also paying just under 70% of tangible book value as mentioned, which gives us comfort in our downside protection buying at this price. on Friday 31 October [2014] at $0.21 therefore does not reflect the intrinsic value of the Group. In pursuit of this objective your Board has commenced to seek opportunities to unlock value in some of its investments concurrently undertaking relevant corporate initiatives primarily to re-align the Group’s new directions so as to maximize value for shareholders.” ON WHATS KNOWABLE To quote Charlie Munger yet again: “We're emphasizing the knowable by predicting how certain people and companies will swim against the current. We're not predicting the fluctuation in the current.” What catalysts do you see over the next 1-3 years? If any? What kinds of moats do you see in a company like Zicom as investors JK: There is a bit of a lag between continue to shun it? If any? the equipment they manufacture for marine vessels, so a pickup in offshore JK: There really isn’t a sustainable, activity would be one catalyst, but give wide moat with Zicom. But there are the recent decline in the price of oil, some competitive advantages that this is more likely to be a headwind have built up from doing reliable work that a tailwind over that timeframe. and establishing good relationships Growth in construction activity in Aus- over time. As an example of these retralia or Southeast Asia could be a lationships, Zicom has been picked more possible catalyst, and the com- among a very select group of compapany has continued to see strong de- nies to receive a government grant to mand from Singapore and Malaysia as expand investments in the medical of late. technology space on very favorable But a more likely catalyst is a lower terms, where Zicom will have the oplevel of expenditure filtering into the tion to buy out the government agency medtech investments, either as they should any of the investments it makes reach a stage of self-sustainability, prove commercially viable. they reach a point where progress is stopped, or where the company finds a Does the global drop in oil prices way to capitalize on the valuations be- disrupt your investment thesis on ing given to promising medtech com- Zicom? panies. The owner-operator CEO, Giok Lak Sim, could also be working to JK: While the current drop in the speed up a catalyst as he seems to be price of oil could affect Zicom and its getting a little tired of the stock’s un- profitability over the short-term after it dervaluation, as is evidenced by the works through its large order book over comment in his annual meeting ad- the next 12-18 months, we believe we dress: “The last transacted share price are being well compensated for it at April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com this valuation, and we think the company and management team are more than set up to handle its effects. To quote Charlie Munger yet again: “We're emphasizing the knowable by predicting how certain people and companies will swim against the current. We're not predicting the fluctuation in the current.” We feel that Zicom is a group that will swim well and adapt to whatever oil prices hold in store over the next several years. Is Giok Lak Sim aligned properly to produce shareholder value? JK: Giok Lak Sim is well aligned with shareholders. He owns over 30% of the stock and his salary is just a fraction of the value of those shares. The price matters to his wealth a lot more than his compensation. He also added to his position late in 2014, which was just the latest episode in open market purchases, buying shares at prices above where the stock trades today. He has also made a concerted effort to surround himself with people he trusts to run different parts of the business, including Kok Hwee Sim, his eldest son whom Matt had the opportunity to meet in person last year while he was on a trip to New York. At today’s price, what upside do you see? JK: This is an investment with a particularly wide valuation range. We think the company is worth a decent premium to tangible book value which, at current exchange rates, would be about $0.33. We like the position size where it is right now at current prices and would consider adding if, in the absence of any news, it fell meaningfully below its current weighting. While we expect there will be news to reassess before we’ll need to consider a sale, we’d likely need a decent premium to tangible book value before we’d really consider taking a lot of chips off the of the proverbial table. If Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 they can get back to earning doubledigit returns on capital over the next couple of years as well as make some progress on the medtech investments, we think the upside is somewhere around 2x tangible book value, or about $0.60-0.65. Though we’ll continually reassess the valuation as new information comes in, which we think is especially important with a business like Zicom. Cambria looks like a very interesting business model. What’s your broad investment thesis here? MM: Cambria is a recent addition to the portfolio. Our basic investment thesis is that Cambria represents an opportunity to invest along-side an owner operator undertaking an attractive buy, turn and build, and eventual exit strategy. We have quite a high opinion of the management caliber and track record. We believe investors get to participate at an attractive valuation supported by significant real estate as a time when there is clear momentum behind the business. The company’s strong balance sheet with additional capacity for further acquisitions supports further non-dilutive growth opportunities. Additionally, the growing 0 to 3 year old car park provides a potential tailwind for service growth and currently modest margins provide significant room for continued margin expansion. All of this, in our minds, bodes well for equity holders over a multi-year period. The position at the end of 2014 was just under 7%, though we’ve since purchased additional shares. With shares trading around .54 per share, how are you looking at valuation? MM: This is definitely an earnings power investment. We believed when we bought the shares that the company was trading at under 10x trailing earnings, adjusted for an acquisition made toward the end of last year. Fur- April 2, 2015 INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT Cambria Automobiles (LSE:CAMB) Description: UK based retailer of new and used cars, commercial vehicle and motorbikes. Basic Valuation: P/OCF: N/A P/FCF: N/A Trailing P/E: N/A Price 52-Week Range Dividend Yield Market Cap Largest Owners: AQR Capital Davidson Kempner Polar Securities 0.54 0.46 — 0.57 1.11% 106.2M % Owned 15.04% 6.47% 5.55% CAMB PRICE HISTORY INVESTMENT SUMMARY Matt Miller believes intrinsic value is significantly in excess of the current share price. Our range begins at above 70p and rises a fair bit beyond that depending on the assumptions. We think in a flat to slightly growing new car market that, depending on the pace of acquisitions and the ultimate margin improvement, the company can grow its intrinsic value in the low teens for a considerable period of time. This ultimately results in a potential IRR for an extended period that exceeds 20%. Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs), other public information ther, given the continuing growth in UK monthly auto sales we believed we were paying perhaps a bit over 8x FY ‘15 earnings for the company. We considered that to be quite a bargain considering: 1) the quality of management, 2) the historical returns on equity, 3) the comparable valuations and transactions and 4) the prospects for a continued, well-executed M&A strategy. Our belief was and is that the market fails to recognize the power of the recent acquisition, the momentum with some of the company’s brands and the quality of management. MM: The catalyst over the next few years in many ways centers around the continued successful M&A strategy. The track record here is really quite spectacular. The group has been entirely built by acquisitions and prior to the Barnet acquisition, the company had not acquired one business that was making money and had not paid any goodwill to speak about. They are disciplined and great at turning around poor performing dealerships. We believe collectively acquired losses of several million have been turned into a group that generated over four million in profits in FY ‘14. We think that over What catalysts do you see in the the next two years that the market will come to realize the potential even benext 1-3 years? If any? yond year one for the Barnet www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Boyles Asset Management February 3, 2015 acquisition to drive significant earnings growth. Ultimately, we expect a mix of Barnet style and turnaround transactions to continue and for these to be done without dilution. Additionally, the company has great momentum with some of the bigger brands in its portfolio, particularly Jaguar, Volvo and Mazda. I’ll just note quickly Jaguar which represents perhaps 15% of the company’s new car sales. That is now a part of Jaguar Land Rover and that company is rolling -out several new and exciting brands that it expects to materially increase new car sales over the next three years. This starts with the launch of the XE which is now taking pre-orders. Levered as the company is to Jaguar and the margins such dealerships provide, we think this could become a material tailwind for the company. One only need to look at the renaissance that occurred at Land Rover and the premium multiples those dealerships demand to get particularly intrigued by this potential tailwind. I would further note that as the 0-3 year old car park continues to grow given the surge in new car sales over the last 3 years following the GFC, this bodes well for the service segment of the business which tends to retain much of this service work over the first few years of a car’s ownership and importantly drives much better margins. And lastly, there is a significant opportunity for margin expansion at Cambria. Part of this is driven by improvement in the service segment as mentioned and further growth in the luxury market as mentioned with Jaguar, but there remains margin potential by continuing to improve operations at the dealerships acquired. April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com share price. Our range begins at above 70p and rises a fair bit beyond that depending on the assumptions. We think in a flat to slightly growing new car market that, depending on the pace of acquisitions and the ultimate margin improvement, the company can grow its intrinsic value in the low teens for a considerable period of time. This ultimately results in a potential IRR for an extended period that exceeds 20%. What are The 3 Things an investor should focus on the most to produce out-sized investment returns What kinds of moats do you see in over the long-term? Cambria? How have they positioned themselves to compete over the 1. Develop a process that you stick to long-term against their competi- and continually improve over time. tors? If, at all? 2. Remember that no matter how much MM: I wouldn’t necessarily say work you do and how much you think there is a moat around the Cambria you know, the future will always be full business, but I would again note the of things that you never see coming. strong management team we are partnering with as a significant advantage. 3. Remember that you just need to find a few intelligent things to do, or as From today’s price, what upside do Charlie Munger put it: “Our job is to find a few intelligent things to do, not to you see? keep up with every damn thing in the MM: We believe intrinsic value is world.” significantly in excess of the current Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Karsan3,Value February 2015 Fund Investor Confidential: Karsan Value Fund Saj Karsan explains his focus on the quality and management of the business, his buying and selling discipline, his biggest investing mistakes, and why he see upside in Alloy Steel, Data Group Ltd, and EWG Technologies . How did you get started in the What are the top 3 books people world of investing? don’t talk about, but that you would recommend to an investor? Saj Karsan: Once I started earning real money (to me, anyway) during Three books that I don't think get an internship in university, I wanted enough credit are Competition Deto know how to grow my savings. So mystified by Professor Bruce GreenI started buying mutual funds, but as wald (Columbia University), The Halo I read further I recognized that the Effect by Phil Rosenzweig, and The funds were just marketing machines, Goal by Eliyahu M. Goldratt. not focused on returns. I started reading from Buffett and Graham What is your philosophy as it reand it totally changed my outlook. lates to investing? I used to just look for cheap companies, but over time I've migrated SK: We are a long-term oriented, towards companies with good/ value investment fund. The fund rational managements. It's so much takes equity positions in public comeasier psychologically to be partners panies which trade at discounts to rather than adversaries with the their intrinsic values and where stewards of my capital. downside risk is low compared to upside potential. Because it can take What does your typical day look many years for such companies to return to their intrinsic values, our like from beginning to end? investment horizon is long-term by SK: I try to start right away in the nature. Also, I do some screening, morning with analyzing companies and I try to steal ideas from anyone on my to-do list. This is when I'm the talking their book for high quality infreshest and probably thinking the vesting ideas. I have a checklist apmost clearly. In the afternoon/ proach, where I'm looking for a good evening, I'll deal with the things that price, good management, sustainadon't require as much clear thinking ble earnings, downside protection like e-mail, reading from other inves- etc. tors, reading articles I've tagged, writing a post if I have something to Describe your value discipline say etc. once you have arrived at an understanding of the Intrinsic Value of Who are the people that inspire (or the business? inspired) you the most? SK: I try to buy at around a >40% SK: Warren Buffett. He got me into discount to my estimate of Intrinsic the whole value investing program Value. I sell if I would rather invest with his folksy yet educational share- the money in something else, or I holder letters, and he's been a role scale out as the price rises towards model ever since. A few years ago IV. This is a good psychological when he graciously agreed to host hedge for me, because if it rises a students from my business school. lot, at least I still own some at the April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com BarelKarsan.com Investor & Blogger... Saj had the distinct pleasure of meeting Mr. Buffett personally while studying under Professor George Athanassakos (Richard Ivey School of Business). During his studies, he and his classmates would visit Berkshires offices in Omaha and even dine with Buffett on occasion. It’s no surprise that he models himself after Buffett. “Basically, I am a long-term investor who consider buying stock as if I’m buying a part of a business. And most of all, I only buy if I believe there is a large margin of safety, says Saj.” His advice to other investors is realize the world is an uncertain place. Only buying when there is a large margin of safety is the best way to increase an investor’s probability of success. Saj is not just a great investor. His blog, BarelKarsan.com, has been a very popular site for value investors over the years. At the site he interacts with readers, provides analysis on companies he is investing, and gives summaries and reviews of timeless investing books. It’s a highly recommended site any type of investor (professional or amateur). Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Karsan3,Value February 2015 Fund price, whereas if it does a round trip, at company. least I did sell some! I see you have a position in Alloy Does management play a big role in Steel. Can you describe your broadyour investing? er investment thesis? SK: For me meeting management is not important at all. Not only can I not afford it with the small amount of capital I run, but I don't consider myself a good judge of character or anything, so I could totally get duped by a management team better at marketing themselves than actually executing. Nevertheless, management does play a big role in my investing, because I'm looking for rational managements that allocate capital effectively and make good decisions with respect to its business. Are there any investing themes that investors should be aware of over the next 6-12 month and beyond? SK: I try to avoid making macro calls on investing themes. I stick to the micro. That said, if a macro event has already occurred, that can help guide investors to sectors where some cheap companies may be uncovered! For example, I've been looking in the oil sector for babies thrown out with the bathwater. I've also recently invested in a Canadian exporter to the US. As the Canadian currency has taken a big hit, such companies experience a tailwind that has not yet shown up in the financials. ture highly uncertain. Okay now for the good news. The company has grown its book value by 46% per year since 2008, and yet you can buy the company at 80% of book! There is no debt, and ex-cash, the SK: I can understand why it would company trades of a P/E of about 4! turn off a lot of investors, but that may be why it's so ridiculously cheap. Alloy Can you elaborate more on your management is not very communica- position in Data Group Ltd? tive, and the stock trades on the OTC market. It's headquartered in Australia SK: A year and a half ago, I wrote and counts the mining industry (is any- about Data Group's debentures as a one not scared of a China bubble potential value opportunity. At that bursting that takes down this industry?) time, they traded for 58 cents on the as one of the major customers of its dollar with maturity in less than four service, which is the application of a years, for a yield to maturity of 20%. proprietary substance to protect steel Today, those same debentures trade equipment from abrasion. The compa- at 71 cents; but as maturity is now just ny's founder just died, making the fu- over 2 years away, the yield to maturity INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT Alloy Steel (OTC:AYSI) Description: Manufacturer of Arcoplate located in Perth, Western Australia. Basic Valuation: P/TBV: P/FCF: Trailing P/E: Price 52-Week Range Dividend Yield Market Cap $1.09 $0.75-$1.83 N/A $18.6M .80 18 2.6 AYSI PRICE HISTORY What was the worst investment you’ve ever made? What happened, and how did you learn from it? SK: There are too many " worst" investments to count! I got taken by some Chinese frauds, for example. I learnt the importance of sticking to countries where the rule of law is strong, and where corporate governance is valued. I also plan to stay diversified until I have truly convinced myself that I know how to separate a great company from a good/lucky/fake April 2, 2015 INVESTMENT SUMMARY Saj explains that the company has grown its book value by 46% per year since 2008, and yet you can buy the company at 80% of book! There is no debt, and excash, the company trades of a P/E of about 4. Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs), other public information www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Karsan3,Value February 2015 Fund is even higher, closer to 25%! This is despite the fact that business conditions for the company have improved markedly. Previously, revenue was declining and management expected revenue to continue to decline annually at a rate of 3-4%. More recently, revenue for the last half of 2014 was higher than in the last half of 2013, and management projects revenue will continue to grow in 2015. But the main improvement relates to the company's cost structure. In the most recent quarter, G&A costs were down 8%, leading to an operating profit of $3.8 million. This covers interest payments by more than 2.5x. Management is not yet done with the cost reductions, either. They have identified other savings (including consolidating four manufacturing facilities into one, which is expected to be completed at the end of this month) adding up to another $10 million per year. Adding these savings (but excluding restructuring charges) to the company's 2014 results yields a potential operating profit on the order of $25 million on an annual basis. This would cover interest payments 4x. The company's total debt is now $90 million, $6 million lower than a year ago. Bank debt, which ranks ahead of the debentures, represents $47 million of this amount. The debentures represent the remaining $43 million. Because of the large discount on the debentures, the company has been buying them back. Data Group showed a gain of $43 thousand in the most recent quarter as a result of the buybacks. The bank debt is due in 2016 and the debentures are due in 2017. Despite Data Group's improved finances, the chances that they can actually pay this debt back through operating cash flow are low. Instead, a refinancing of some form will be required. But if management continues to execute as it has over the last year and a half, interest coverage will improve and the company should able to secure a loan at favorable rates that can be used to pay off its existing obligations. Data Group's debentures offer plenty of upside without a lot of downside risk, in this author's opinion. The company is profitable, covers its interest payments comfortably, and should see revenues and profits grow in 2015. As such its debt should be trading much closer to par, and may do so as investors get to know the story. April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Tell us a little more about your position in IWG Technologies? SK: IWG Technologies is a producer of aircraft water systems. The company is the "world’s leading provider of flight-certified potable water treatment units, on-demand water heaters, aircraft water pumps, a compact water module, and innovative potable water components", with more than 3,000 of its units installed on airplanes INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT Data Group Ltd. (via Debentures) (OTC:DGPIF) Description: Provides document management and marketing solutions. Basic Valuation: P/TBV: P/OFCF: Trailing P/E: Price 52-Week Range Dividend Yield Market Cap $0.61 $0.37—$0.90 N/A $14.40M 1 1 3.74 DGPIF PRICE HISTORY INVESTMENT SUMMARY The company's total debt is now $90 million, $6 million lower than a year ago. Bank debt, which ranks ahead of the debentures, represents $47 million of this amount. The debentures represent the remaining $43 million. Because of the large discount on the debentures, the company has been buying them back. Data Group showed a gain of $43 thousand in the most recent quarter as a result of the buybacks. The company is profitable, covers its interest payments comfortably, and should see revenues and profits grow in 2015. As such its debt should be trading much closer to par, and may do so as investors get to know the story. Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs), other public information Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: Karsan3,Value February 2015 Fund worldwide. But the company does not trade like a leader. It has a P/E (ttm) of just 10 despite a net cash position and expectations for growth. While sales increased 12% last year, income fell as the company had to spend more in anticipation of increased deliveries in 2015. IWG recently launched some new products which it expects will help achieve the company's sales growth rate of 10-15%. The nature of the company's products is such that there appear to be barriers to entry in this field. Companies with existing contracts with aircraft manufacturers get to spread their fixed costs (design, manufacturing etc.) across more units. Furthermore, customers likely don't want to risk dealing with new companies in such a small but important component of the aircraft. As such, IWG competes with few competitors with many of its products. Another tailwind in IWG's favor is currency-related. Most of the company's costs (along with its financials and share price) are in Canadian dollars, but 4/5ths of its revenues are exports in US dollars. Thanks to some massive US dollar appreciation of late, the company should see some benefit to the bottom line as a result. Note, however, that the company does hedge a portion of its US sales, and so the benefits of the currency moves may not be as pronounced as quickly as one might otherwise expect. INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT IWG Technologies (TSXV: IWG) Description: Engaged in developing, manufacturing, and selling of aircraft water treatment equipment. Basic Valuation: P/TBV: 1.7 P/FCF: 17.58 Trailing P/E: 10.7 Price 52-Week Range Dividend Yield Market Cap Largest Owners: Penderfund Capital $0.25 $0.15—0.26 N/A $9.6M % Owned 14.02% IWG PRICE HISTORY INVESTMENT SUMMARY It has a P/E of just 10 despite a net cash position and expectations for growth. While sales increased 12% last year, income fell as the company had to spend more in anticipation of increased deliveries in 2015. The nature of the company's products is such that there appear to be barriers to entry in this field, which should allow the business to continue profitability and growth. Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs), other public information April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Value Investor Confidential INSIDE THE INVESTOR’S MIND: Value Investing General Principles February 3, 2015 How Biases Effect Investor Behavior In this recent white paper, Joseph Calandro, Jr. profiles six core value investing principles. it is worded can lead pretty much anyone to think they are a “contrarian,” which of course they are not for as James Grant has insightfully observed, “What money can’t buy—what brains frequently don’t contribute—is a precious, non-consensus view of the future.” Professional value investors are very much "contrarians" because they understand, as the school’s founder Benjamin Graham did, that "You may take it as an axiom that you cannot profit in Wall Street by continuously doing the obvious or popular thing." As value investor Howard Marks has obIntroduction Like many people I admire Thomas served: "Accepting the broad concept Edison and, also like many people, I of contrarianism is one thing; putting it have visited his New Jersey factory, into practice is another." which is now a museum. On my first visit there I noticed a sign that quoted ON BEING CONTRARIAN: Sir Joshua Reynolds, which Mr. Edison prominently displayed above the facto- Professional value investors are ry time clock immediately in front of the very much "contrarians" because building’s entrance. It reads as follows: they understand, as the school’s "There is no expedient to which a man founder Benjamin Graham did, will not go to avoid the labor of think- that "You may take it as an axiom ing." What an odd quote, I thought at that you cannot profit in Wall the time, for your employees to see as Street by continuously doing the obvious or popular thing." they check in for work. Editor’s Note: If you try to explain value investing to someone, you’ll likely agree that it either sticks right away and it stays with them a lifetime, or it doesn’t and it never becomes part of their investing philosophy. Joe does an excellent job of laying out the very principles that should be engrained in the very fabric of every value investor. Below, used with permission, are excerpts from the latest white paper by Joseph Calandro, Jr. titled, “Value Investing Principles” 6 General Principles Principle 1: When I was trading, many people said they put a premium on being a "contrarian." One of the classic books on this subject is The Art of Contrary Thinking by Humphrey Neill, which begins with this definition: “The art of contrary thinking may be stated simply: Thrust your thoughts out of the rut. In a word, be a nonconformist when using your mind….Let me give you an easily remembered epigram to sum up this thought: When everyone thinks alike, everyone is likely to be wrong” (emphasis original). This is a classic definition, but the way April 2, 2015 is as most people have credit cards, car payments and/or mortgages and these are all forms of credit. But examples are not definitions. Fundamentally, credit--as James Grant insightfully observed--is "money of the mind" or a subjective estimate of a person's or institution's ability and willingness to pay their debts. While I would generally not expect non-financial professionals to understand the economic implications of this, I do expect financial professionals to understand the implications, especially the higher-order implications, and yet following the recent financial crisis we heard numerous financial professionals justifying abysmal credit positions with arguments like "It was triple-A rated so how can I be blamed for not foreseeing crisis-level distress?" A value investing -based reply to such statements could be framed like this: "While rating agencies thought those investments were creditworthy, what did you do to validate the credits?" Questions like this help to show how the principle of value subjectivity can be operationalized; stated another way, because value is an opinion the assumptions behind a valuation should be thoroughly underPrinciple 2: A fundamental driver of stood and validated. “herding behavior” such as this is the subjective nature of value. Value sub- Principle 3: Rigorous bottom-up jectivity simply means that value is an analyses is a key characteristic of all opinion , which is significant because professional value investors, which is while everyone has an opinion most significant for as value investor Martin people tend to be more confident with J. Whitman has observed, “To the ustheir opinions when others agree with er, the ultimate value of a value investthem. Nevertheless, the fact remains ing approach compared with the value that before a trade can take place valu- of academic finance depends on how ations must diverge. The value of eve- realistic and useful the various asrything is subjective, which may seem sumptions are.” The first step of botsimple but like many seemingly simple tom-up fundamental analysis is, sensithings its implications are profound. bly enough, to read all of the docuTake, for example, credit. Just about ments associated with the asset (or everyone thinks they know what credit liability) to be valued. This may sound www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Value Investor Confidential INSIDE THE INVESTOR’S MIND: Value Investing General Principles February 3, 2015 like a given, but the sad and highly irrational fact is that most people who invest do not read financial documents. Some examples to illustrate this point: ● One of the most incredible quotes to come out of the recent financial crisis is this one that is attributed to value investor Bill Ackman: "'And usually, by the way, most people don't read the stuff [meaning, financial statements] anyway,' Ackman added. 'So you've got a huge edge just by reading, right? And then if you really dig into something, you can really know more than the market.'" ● Sadly, this phenomenon is not new. For example, the failure of investors to read financial information is an underlying theme of James Grant's aforementioned bestselling book, Money of the Mind (NY: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1992). ● Of course, failing to read financial information is not limited to investors. Before the recent financial crisis many financial services executives did not do much financial reading either, as Michael Lewis observed in bestselling book, The Big Short. For example, Mr. Lewis profiled an experience of investor Steve Eisman as follows, "He'd go to meetings with Wall Street CEOs and ask them the most basic questions about their balance sheets. 'They didn't know,' he said. 'They didn't know their own balance sheets.'" Bottom-up fundamental assumptions are line-by-line estimates of certain financial parameters that are formed on a case-by-case basis. Whether an assumption is correct or not depends on an analyst’s knowledge of the item being estimated (following exhaustive reading and investigation), the process used to derive the assumption and the valuation approach to which the assumption is being applied. In short, assumptions are opinions and like any opinion they can be formed correctly or incorrectly. rigorous and conservative approach to the estimation of all assumptions. A dictionary defines conservative as "cautiously moderate or purposefully low: a conservative estimate." Accordingly to Benjamin Graham, "It is a basic rule of prudent investment that all estimates, when they differ from past performance, must err at least slightly on the side of understatement." The principle of conservatism is closely related to the earlier principle of contrarianism in that most people tend to approach valuation optimistically (and hence aggressively) when prices are going up, and pessimistically (and hence despondently) when prices are going down. In contrast, value inves- ON MEAN REVERSION: Fluctuations can vary from mere oscillations to wave-like swings, but irrespective of the size of the fluctuations pricing will, over time, frequently revert to some central tendency. tors attempt to strike a conservative balance across market conditions, which is a great deal harder to do than it may appear because, simply put, it goes against human nature. Applied with discipline over time the application of the above four principles will result in a circle of competence, which is value investing nomenclature for a knowledge or informational advantage in a given area or set of areas. Principle 5: Our next principle is based on the statistical concept of mean reversion, which is a simple but profound concept that holds the following: Given value subjectivity, market perceptions of value will fluctuate around some longer-term mean or expected value. Such fluctuations can Principle 4: Value investing takes a vary from mere oscillations to wave- April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com like swings, but irrespective of the size of the fluctuations pricing will, over time, frequently revert to some central tendency. The regularity with which this occurs has caused confusion to some, even to Benjamin Graham himself. For example, on March 11, 1955, Mr. Graham testified before the Committee on Banking and Currency in the United States Senate that resulted in this exchange: The Chairman: When you find a special situation and you decide, just for illustration, that you can buy for $10 and it is worth $20, and you take a position, and then you cannot realize it until a lot of other people decide it is worth $30, how is that process brought about--by advertising, or what happens? Mr. Graham: That is one of the great mysteries of our business, and it is a mystery to me as well as to everybody else. We know from experience that eventually the market catches up with value. It is realized in one way or another. The Chairman: But do you do anything to help that? Do you advertise, or what do you do? Mr. Graham: On the contrary, we try, as a matter of fact, to keep our operations as confidential as we can. The Chairman: Even after you buy? Mr. Graham: Even after we have acquired our shares. The Chairman: Why? Mr. Graham: Basically for the reason that we are just not interested in other people knowing about our business, and we have no interest in endeavoring to persuade people to buy stocks in which we have an ownership. We have never done it and we never will do it. The Chairman: That is rather unusual. Since you make your capital gains, a lot of people have got to decide it is worth $30. Mr. Graham: We have been very fortunate in our experience by finding that people decide that stock that you mention is worth $30 without the Value Investor Confidential INSIDE THE INVESTOR’S MIND: Value Investing General Principles February 3, 2015 necessity of our doing anything about it on the advertising side. We might conceivably at times intervene in a managerial policy. We might suggest some change in the procedure, but that of course is merely because we are substantial stockholders. We now know that a fundamental driver of mean reversion is the fact that higher returns tend to decline over time due to increased competition, etc., while lower returns tend to rise over time due to performance improvement initiatives, etc., as indeed Mr. Graham himself earlier in career has observed; for example, in the opening to his seminal Security Analysis he quotes from Horace's Ars Poetica as follows: "Many shall be restored that are now fallen and many shall fall that now are in honor." Principle 6: The general principles we have discussed thus far are cumulative, which means that they build on each other leading up to the final and most important principle, the margin of safety, the utility of which Martin J. Whitman and Fernando Diz cogently describe as follows: “The lower the price, the less the risk of loss and the greater the prospect for gain.” Conceptually, this principle like all of the others is very easy to understand; however, the simplicity of exposition does not extend to simplicity of execution, which is highly significant because every successful value investor attributes their success to this principle. For example, in 1991 Seth Klarman named the title of his seminal book, Margin of Safety, and in 1992, Warren Buffett stated: "We insist on a margin of safety in our purchase price. If we calculate the value of a common stock to be only slightly higher than its price, we're not interested in buying. We believe this margin-of-safety principle, so strongly emphasized by Ben Graham, to be the cornerstone of investment success." Significantly, because the general principles that I have outlined are cumulative you effectively cannot invest April 2, 2015 at a margin of safety unless you: ● Approach the market as a contrarian (Principle 1) because if you think like everyone else you are going to value things like everyone else and thus you will pay what everyone else pays; ● Understand the risks and opportunities associated with value subjectivity (Principle 2); ● Approach valuation rigorously from the bottom up (Principle 3); ● Formulate conservative valuation assumptions (Principle 4); and ● Understand how to put mean reversion to work for an investment instead of having it work against one (Principle 5). Conclusion The fact that so few people have been able to consistently implement these general principles over time attests to how incredibly difficult professional value investing is. However, when the principles are successfully applied they have resulted in extraordinary levels of insight. So extraordinary, in fact, that one of the questions I am frequently asked when I lecture at either the undergraduate or graduate levels is, "Are successful value investors simply born or are they made?" My reply to this question goes something like this: "Before answering, I'm curious, how many of you play chess?" As chess is a popular game most of the hands in the classroom tend to rise so I ask: "How many of you play chess well?" Typically, three-quarters or so of the hands in the room go up. "How many of you are ranked Masters or Grandmasters in chess?" No hands typically go up; rather, a complaint is typically raised: "That's not really fair; you said 'well,' not 'expert.'" "To me, 'well' means significantly better than average and in chess that is Master and Grandmaster. You may think this standard is high but it really is not: most of us are average chess players, broadly defined. In fact, most of us are average in a broad array of activities, including investing and business, whether we like to admit it or not." www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Silence. "So, to continue with the example a bit longer, the question now becomes why do you think Grandmasters and Masters play chess so well?" Answers tend to vary, but by now the students know where I am going: "They practice a lot," "They study and memorize the games of famous Grandmaster in the past," etc., and then, inevitably, more silence when they run out of answers. "In my opinion, the answer is in the way they 'see the board.' They see it differently than average players do." Now, value investing is infinitely harder than chess is, and it is obviously not a game as the money investors manage will ultimately be spent on retirement, education, medical expenses, etc. But the point of this example is to show by analogy how successful value investors "see value" differently than just about all other people do. Howard Marks refers to this ability as "secondlevel thinking." Such thinking is enabled by years and years of experience applying the above general principles, which over time results in consistent identification of investments selling at appreciable margins of safety. The importance of consistently applying sound general principles to investment and corporate management success cannot be underestimated.42 As Benjamin Graham himself stated, “The main point is to have the right general principles and the character to stick to them.” For a corporate management example, consider the late Larry Tisch, who was the cofounder, Chairman and CEO of Loews Corporation. As Christopher Winans reflects in his biography of Mr. Tisch, “What worked for Tisch wasn’t having a plan but having a clear set of principles for determining when to buy an asset and when to sell, whether it was a business, a commodity, or a security.” Words to run a company by! >GET FULL WHITE PAPER HERE< Value Investor Confidential VALUE REVEALED: February Alliance 3, 2015 One Is This Company Smoked…? This hated tobacco manufacturer could be righting its ship. The continued neglect of this hated stock and sector could provide opportunity to investors. Despite the world’s hatred for tobacco and tobacco businesses. Individuals around the world continue to smoke tobacco. Especially in emerging countries. It is a habit forming consumption pattern that has been around for thousands of years. Alliance One plays an integral role in the supply chain to cigarette manufacturers. The industry is dominated by two companies: Alliance One and Universal Corp. Together they share about 70% of the market and act as a duopoly on the market. Market share has stayed constant the last 10 years. There are three things that help to provide competitive advantages to Alliance One which have not show up on the bottom line yet. One, it is a low cost producer of tobacco. Two, it has vast industry experience. Three, it operates in an industry that only has two main players. One is very stable with low debt (Universal)...the other is highly cyclical with loads of debt (Alliance). Time will tell if Alliance will be able to match its peer. This an active value situation that has the potential for big returns if Peter Sikkel is able to engineer a turnaround in operations. If Sikkel is able to execute a fraction of what their main competitor, Universal Corp has been able to do. This stock has the potential for more than a 4x return at current levels based on our calculation of normalized earnings. The main catalyst will be the turnaround. And Management is heavily incentivized to execute the turnaround plan of this company. In fact, Alliance One is trading a little more than 2x the hard EPS minimum of $1.10 it must earn before management receives any long-term incentive pay. Earnings were $1.49 in 2009. I expect Sikkel to continue to invest in emerging markets while cutting costs. If Alliance One is able to achieve 1/10th of the operating efficiency of Universal...Alliance should prove to be a lucrative investment over the long term. The probably of an executable turnaround in business operations are April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com INVESTMENT SPOTLIGHT Alliance One International (NYSE: AOI) Description: Leading independent tobacco leaf merchant. Price 52-Week Range Dividend Yield Market Cap Basic Valuation: P/TBV: P/FCF: Trailing P/E: Largest Owners: Aegis Financial Donald Smith & Co. Baupost Group LLC .50 N/A N/A $1.10 $0.83 — 3.01 N/A $97.38M % Owned 9.46% 9.19% 6.62% AOI PRICE HISTORY INVESTMENT SUMMARY Despite the aggressive selling in shares of Alliance One, the argument for investment remains strong in AOI. The recent downdraft in share prices is likely a result of technical selling after being ejected from the S&P 600 Index of small cap stocks. AOI could generate $0.50 per share of earnings on a normalized basis in the coming years. At 10x that’s almost 400% from current levels. Forced selling in conjunction with extreme undervaluation and improving fundamentals, makes AOI an interesting risk-reward candidate. Sources: Company reports (10Ks, 10Qs, etc..), other public information small and we have factored it into our analysis. The real margin of safety in Alliance One is that it is trading below its tangible book value. Which we believe to be a low line estimation of its real liquidation value. This may not be an amazing company, however it's available at an incredible price. Value Investor Confidential INVESTOR CONFIDENTIAL: FebruaryEditor’s 3, 2015Letter How Complex Could A Complex Adaptive System Be…? In one word —- Complex! Essentially it means that cause and effect are not statically linked. And by Learning how to invest is likely one of that I mean, just because something the most multifaceted lessons an indi- happened in the past, it doesn’t mean vidual will learn in his or her lifetime. you should expect it in the future. This is because the stock market is a highly complex system of interconnect“In the complex adaptive ing shares, companies, investors, and system that is the stock market other networks that rely and feed off of … there will be dominant each other for both success and failnarratives that most everyone ure. The stock market is a complex agrees with and that seem to system that mankind has been trying provide past explanations for to fully understand since its inception. In fact, being able to accurately predict what has happened and predict what’s likely to happen.…we the constant ebb and flow of these don’t make forecasts and rarely precise transitions within the conform portfolios to massive backdrop that is the market, is the dream of investors across the those forecasts.” globe. Bill Miller Unfortunately, it's a dream that very few will accomplish due to the volatile Just because the economy is at the and unpredictable nature of business same debt-to-GDP level as it was in and money. This shows that the mar- 1929, doesn’t necessarily mean we are ketplace functions because of the dy- going to encounter another Great Denamic network and collective behav- pression and market crash of 80%. iors within the system. Each entity within the macro-structure mutates and With that said…. adapts so as to increase the possibility of survival as a whole. Observing past behaviors during cerIn its simplest form, a complex adap- tain events is certainly an interesting tive system can be broken down into and fun endeavor. Seeing how behavheterogeneous agents. These agents, ior develops and forms into feedback or investors and speculators, interact loops to increase or decrease the efwith each other, and the market, simi- fects can help yield understanding. larly to a colony of ants. This is called The complexities of so many different “emergence” because the patterns and interlocking pieces, living and invented, regular processes become recogniza- adapting within themselves to build ble in the much larger entity of the stock market from the interaction with smaller entities, like traders, brokers, and shares. This system can't be reduced to a pile of information through reduction or deduction, but must be calculated through a complex method of all interactions occurring, and the understanding of how they cause change in one another. and break down such a large scale system, make the stock market seem like a sentient organism. It also makes it one of the most unpredictable systems in the world. Its intricacies and wildly unstable behavior, such as the dot.com boom (and bust) and the big market crash during 1987, make it understandable that individuals leave the stock market and investing, never to return again. As Mark Twain famously said, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.” So what do we do about it? Nothing really. You should expect boom and bust periods. Expect the unexpected. Never lean too far to one side of the market’s bearish or bullish perception. Trying to guess what will happen in the stock market is a fool’s errand. An investor will be better served to focus on the most important factors and components to investing success. Lukas Neely Co-Editor-In-Chief So what does all of that mean? April 2, 2015 www.ValueInvestorConfidential.com Value Investor Confidential February 3, 2015 Value Investor Confidential Subscription Rates are $499 for 1 year, $799 for 2 years, $999 for 3 years ● Order online at ValueInvestorConfidential.com or call 202-631-9460 to order by phone ● Customers may cancel at anytime within 30 days for refunds and guarantee ● Value Investor Confidential is published by EndlessRiseInvestor.com (parent company: Elite Investing Blueprint, LLC) ● This entire newsletter is Copyright 2015 by Value Investor Confidential All Right Reserved. ● Members of the press should contact Lukas at the above number or at [email protected]. Information contained herein was derived from sources believed to be reliable. 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