TIP105: MASTERMIND DISCUSSION 3RD QUARTER 2016

W/ TOBIAS CARLISLE, HARI RAMACHANDRA, & CALIN YABLONSKI

23 September 2016

Every quarter the Mastermind Group from The Investor’s Podcast gets together over Skype and discusses their latest investments and ideas. In this episode the discussion starts off by trying to think of creative ways to invest in an environment that is overbought.  With market premiums at 100 year highs, the investors struggle for ideas to do well in US markets.  The team also discusses the idea of sell put options and what kind of results that might yield.

In this episode, Toby Carlisle mentioned an idea of event driven investing.  If you would like to read more about this idea, be sure to check-out this article.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • How can an investor find a decent yield when many asset classes are overvalued.
  • Why special situations might be the best investing approach right now.
  • If Humana is a profitable risk arbitrage bet right now.
  • How you can generate a steady cash flow by selling put options in great businesses.
  • If dollar cost averaging is a good investment strategy in the current market conditions.
  • If QE causes a roaring stock market.

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EPISODE SUMMARY

During the show, Preston was mentioning some graphs that pertained to central banks increasing the size of their balance sheet and it’s potential for correlation in stock market growth.  Below are some of the aforementioned charts:

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CONNECT WITH HARI

CONNECT WITH TOBIAS

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  1:04  

Hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh, and I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host, Stig Brodersen out in Seoul, South Korea. 

And we have our Mastermind assembled again for the third quarter of 2016. Today’s date is the 12th of September. And we have Calin Yablonski with us. We have Hari Ramachandra. And we have Toby Carlisle. All of the members of our Mastermind Group, and today we’ve got a whole range of things that we’re going to be talking about. So I’m gonna throw it over to Hari because Hari has a fantastic question that he wants to open this up to the group.

Hari Ramachandra  1:43  

Hey, Preston and Stig, glad to be with you here back in the Mastermind. The question I had was regarding negative interest rates or low interest rate environment. And what should a retail investor an average Joe do? What we hear today in the news is about the low interest rates that have never been so long. And the economy being distorted because of that price discovery mechanism has been disabled. And it’s very hard to find any attractive investment. The cap rates on rental properties are not attractive. Stock market is overpriced. They say bonds are in a bubble. So what should a normal average citizen do in this environment?

Preston Pysh  2:29  

And Hari, I just want to compound and add to what you just said. I think another interesting piece to it is when you look at the earnings expectations and the earnings forecast, those just continue to go down as the markets continue to hold these highs, which I think is also very interesting dynamic. And I mean, that’s been at play for more than a year now.

Tobias Carlisle  2:49  

The issue is that the market’s overvalued, and that’s not a new phenomenon. That’s happened repeatedly since the tulip bulb. So we can look historically what other things investors have done when the markets been very overvalued. And Warren Buffett, of course has invested through many very high markets, very low markets. He famously gave the game away in 1966 because the market was too high. He was subsequently right, the market proceeded to fall pretty rapidly from that point, bottoming in 1974. 

But in that first incarnation of his investment lifetime, he was running what was then called the Buffett Partnerships. There were several of them. So it work outs were what we sort of know today as special situations, though companies were though probably trading at a big discount to tangible asset value. And Buffett would buy a big enough position where he could get control of the board. You can force out the old managers who weren’t really doing their job, realize the assets and then pay them out as cash, and then he’d make quite a big game doing that. 

There are many categories of these sort of special situations. One, that Buffett has written about in his Berkshire Hathaway letters as well, is merger arbitrage or risk arbitrage as it’s sometimes known. You’ll find these opportunities and you can find websites where they just list out all of them. They’re just going on at any given time. I’ll show you what the bid price is. That’s what the acquiring company is going to pay. And you can see the current market price. And then you can find the date that the transaction is expected to close. And you can determine a gross return from sort of the price that you pay in the market to the price that you’ve taken out at, then you can annualize that return. 

Buffett said that over the investments that he had undertaken over a very long period of time, he found that it did something like 20% compound around him, which is a gigantic return really. I can look around now and I’ve got one that we have on in our discretionary strategies. It’s Humana, which is a healthcare stock been bought by Aetna. It’s a very big company. It’s a $26 billion company at the moment. It’s trading for about $175 or $180, depending on where the market is at any given time. The bid is $225, approximately, and that bid is $125 in cash and .8375 Aetna shares which you can work out. Calculate, it’s about another $100. So it’s about $225.

Preston Pysh  5:25  

So Toby, my question would be, when you typically see these deals getting ready to take place. You typically see the market immediately react to the acquiring company and the share price immediately shoots up and then being able to know that that announcement was going to be made, in my opinion is like, next to near impossible. Then you run into the risk of not knowing if the deal is actually going to close. Like, I know Yahoo! a couple years back probably almost a decade now, but that deal just completely fell through and there’s tons of instances where the deal falls through, and then you see that acquirer’s company stock price just get crushed. How do you think through some of those concerns and those risks?

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