TIP088: THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR

W/ PRESTON & STIG

21 April 2016

In this episode Preston and Stig discuss billionaire Warren Buffett’s favorite investing book, The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham. The world’s most successful investor read this book when he was 19, and Warren Buffett has several times praised it as the very foundation for shaping his investment philosophy.

The book has also shaped Preston and Stig investing strategy, and the core principles are the very same that The Investors Podcast is built upon. Actually Stig is so excited about the book that he decided to create a chapter by chapter video course of The Intelligent Investor, and you can learn more about the course here.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why The Intelligent Investor is Warren Buffett’s favorite book.
  • Why inflation is perhaps the most overlooked macro investing metric.
  • When and how you should conduct active and passive investing.
  • Why Warren Buffett thinks that chapters 8 and 20 are the two most important chapters of The Intelligent Investor in investment literature.
  • How to calculate the intrinsic value of a stock and why Preston and Stig disagree with Warren Buffet.

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.

Intro  00:06

Broadcasting from Bel Air, Maryland, this is The Investor’s Podcast. They’ll read the books and summarize the lessons. They’ll test the waters and tell you when it’s cold. They’ll give you actionable investing strategies. Your hosts, Preston Pysh and Stig Brodersen!

Preston Pysh  00:29

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

Today, we’ve got a book that a lot of people have heard us talk about. The author of the book is Benjamin Graham. Benjamin Graham wrote two books that were famous. The first one is “Security Analysis” which we’ve done an episode on, and then the other book is “The Intelligent Investor.”

So to just give everyone a quick background, if you’re joining us for the first time on the show, and maybe you don’t know who Benjamin Graham is. So Benjamin Graham was Warren Buffett’s professor at Columbia. Graham started teaching at Columbia University back in 1928. He wrote this book and it was the textbook that he used in his class. And the textbook was called “Security Analysis,” which we’ve done in a previous episode. How many episodes ago was that, Stig? Like 20 or something?

Stig Brodersen  01:20

Yeah, that sounds about right.

Preston Pysh  01:21

Yeah, probably about 20 episodes ago. And so Ben Graham wrote this book “Security Analysis” that was published back in 1934. So all this was kind of going on during the Great Depression. And Graham then was a professor for quite a few years. He ended up being the professor for Warren Buffett. And Warren Buffett whose net worth is, I don’t know where it’s at right now, maybe 70 billion or 65 billion. Something like that. It’s way up there. One of the wealthiest people in the entire planet has said that everything that he has learned, and his investing approach was completely shaped by Benjamin Graham, the author of these two books.

And so that’s why we like to place a lot of emphasis on Benjamin Graham. He’s the founder of value investing, a lot of people have attributed their massive net worth to following the principles of Benjamin Graham.

02:12

So in today’s episode, we’re going to be reviewing “The Intelligent Investor” by Benjamin Graham. And where this book is a little bit different than “Security Analysis” is that “The Intelligent Investor” is kind of a watered-down, maybe easier version, definitely geared towards the common investor as opposed to like a security analyst that is professionally working for a big bank. So this is for the common investor and how they can invest. So what we’re going to do is Stig and I came up with… Actually, Stig came up with the agenda, I should say. He emailed it to me, but Stig came up with the agenda.

And the way he broke it out is he said, “Preston, let’s do chapters one through seven in the first segment. Let’s do chapter eight because that’s an important one. Then we’re going to do 9 through 19, and then chapter 20, all by itself.”

So we’ll talk about intrinsic value, all sorts of things. And hopefully, you guys enjoy this one. So let’s go ahead and start this off. We’re going to be reviewing the first seven chapters, one through seven, and kind of hitting the highlights between the two of us.

03:12

So the book starts off with a very, very important discussion. And that discussion is distinguishing between an investor and a speculator. So here’s the difference. Graham says that when you’re an investor, you’re not seeking a massive return in a short duration or short period of time. You’re looking for a reasonable return. And so Graham doesn’t necessarily say a reasonable return is 10% or less or anything like that. He leaves that up to the reader to determine but I think Graham would probably say if you’re looking for a 50% return in a one year span, or a one-year timeframe, that’s probably getting into the realm where you’re looking for excessive gains, and that starts to become speculative in nature.

03:59

So the second part is that when you have an investor, he’s doing something to promote the safety of the return of on the principal. So that an investor won’t do anything that compromises his principal in any type of extreme manner. So let’s say that you were going to invest in a large-cap company. Let’s just say it was a company like Apple, and you were looking at Apple’s returns and their revenues were steady. They had all these consistent numbers. And the expectation is that they’re going to continue to earn at least the level that they’re earning today into the future. And there’s no anything that you can see on the horizon that would cause a major disruption in the next couple of years. That would be an example of investing because, at this point in time, you can’t necessarily say the revenues or the net income are all over the place. So it’s not something that you can project or predict where the bad event is going to occur. That’s where you get into more of an investing approach as opposed to a speculative approach.

You know, back in the day, Sirius XM Radio, their net income was up and down. They were moving stuff off their balance sheet onto their income statement. It was just kind of a mess if you look at their financials. And so at that point in time, you could, as an investor versus a speculator, you could look at that pick and say, “You know, next quarter, they could have a negative net income, or they just had a positive one. That could totally happen based on their track record and the things that have happened.”

If you know that, as a person that’s looking to invest upfront, and you know it could potentially be bad. You’ve identified an event that could jeopardize your principal, which now goes into what Ben Graham would call speculation as opposed to investing because you already know the event that could kind of come crashing down.

05:50

So that’s it. Those are the two things you got to be able to protect your principal, and you’ve got to go after things that are giving you reasonable returns and that’s what he would classify as investing. So here’s the direct quote out of the book. He says investing is promoting the safety of the principal and an adequate return. So that’s where I’m pulling that from. And this is big. I mean, this is huge for a person to kind of understand that I know it sounds simple, but if you aren’t doing that, then you are speculating. Then you are saying I feel like this is the direction things are going to go in. Anytime you start throwing out the “feel” word opposed to “I have looked at the company’s cash flows, they have been very consistent over the last five years. Looking towards the future, I expect those cash flows to continue to remain consistent if not slightly grow. And because of that, when I do a discounted cash flow analysis, taking those future cash flows and discounting them back to today’s present value, I expect the value of the company to be $35 a share at a 7% discount rate.”

If it doesn’t sound like that, that’s how you know when Stig and I are doing the intrinsic value of an individual company. That’s the conversation that we’re having in our head, and that we’re writing out to determine the value of something. And here’s a key point, in all of that conversation, we’re saying the competitive advantage of the company will be sustained or the expectation of the competitive advantage will be sustained during that period of time. Those are the things we’re saying as an investor.

07:28

Now on the show, because it’s a lot more fun to talk about this kind of stuff on the show. A lot of the times we’re talking macro, and we’re talking, you know, what we think from a speculative point of view. “Yeah, I think Japan’s going to be you know, a disaster.” But we’re kind of stepping into the realm of more speculation when we talk about that kind of stuff on the show. Then really, how we invest our money.

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