Looking at CGMFX

Its that time of year, where you should be looking at your investment portfolio, assessing your performance, seeing what you did right or wrong and if any part of it needs to be rebalanced.

Its also a good time to assess your tax liability and see if you can (or should) be funding your Roth IRA for last year. Typically, if you’re in the highest tax bracket, you cannot invest in a Roth IRA. It also doesn’t make much sense, since when you retire you might be a lower tax bracket. But in any case, you should be investing in a regular IRA. Up to certain income levels you get a tax credit for these contributions, so its definitely worth more research. You can invest up to April 15th for last year’s contribution.

You might also want to take a look at your life insurance and see if it still meets your needs. You may have had a life event which requires you to modify it.

Since I’m expecting to go to business school in the Fall, I want an evenly balanced portfolio and preferable a no-load Mutual fund with low fees. Typically, you’d chose several funds to balance out your portfolio. I already have a few country-specific ETFs that I’ve short-listed, but I also want a little bit in a fund that’s a bit aggressive and willing to go short if conditions permit.

After some research, I think I’ve found a pretty decent fund which suits my investment mindset. Here’s a snippet from there July 2007 semi-annual report:

CGM Focus Fund held major long positions in the oil service, metals and mining and engineering industries at quarter end. The Fund’s three largest long holdings were Open Joint Stock Company ‘‘Vimpel-Communications’’ ADR, Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan, Inc. and Schlumberger Limited. The Fund was also approximately 8% invested in stocks sold short at June 30 (percentage of total net assets). The short positions were in financial services and regional banks. The three largest short positions were Countrywide Financial Corporation, Indymac Bancorp, Inc. and Fortress Investment Group LLC.

CGMFX returned a whopping 80% in 2007. Except my BHP Billiton, Anglo American and Petro-China shares, most of my portfolio didn’t come anywhere close to these returns. Don’t know if it’ll continue to produce these stellar returns, but so long as Ken Heebner is the fund manager I think it will.

All Intelligent Investing Is Value Investing

Today’s post is courtesy of Wealth Building Lessons.

This past year, the stock market has seen incredibly volatile swings. My non-retirement portfolio has been up 20% and then down to 0%. Twice. Of course, my portfolio doesn’t have a direct correlation with any of the indices but it just as vulnerable to the moods of the market.

Most people have a tendency to bail at the bottom of the market and buy at tops. They let their emotions take control of their investment strategies. The main reason for this is their lack of investing intelligence. They either do not have strong fundamental reasons to buy a stock. They usually buy it because its gone up in price and looks like it might go higher. That’s often a poor reason to buy a stock (as a long-term investment strategy. Although for short-term trading it might work).

According to Berkshire Hathaway’s (NYSE:BRK-A) (NYSE:BRK-B) Vice Chairman Charlie Munger:

If you are not investing based on fundamental valuation principles, you are not investing. You may think you are, but Ben Graham had another term for it: speculation.

So what is intelligent investing?

As Benjamin Graham stated in the book Security Analysis: “An investment operation is one which, upon thorough analysis, promises safety of principal and a satisfactory return. Operations not meeting these requirements are speculative.” Graham’s definition implies that a true investment is made only when you have the right data and reasoning, followed by a suitable price that ensures a margin of safety. Putting capital to work any other way is, by its nature, speculative.

Value investors don’t focus on their performance in a bull market, but on their perseverance during a bear market. In his 1961 partnership letter, Warren Buffett expressed this crucial point when he told his partners, “I would consider a year in which we decline 15% and the [Dow Jones] average 30% to be much superior to a year when both we and the average advanced 20%.” Most investors don’t fully grasp this investing approach, and the result is inferior long-term performance relative to the benchmarks.

Speaking of bear markets, in the 1960s, Warren Buffett invested more than 30% of his assets in one company, American Express (NYSE:AXP), during that company’s worst scandal. While everyone else was bailing, Buffett stood still, because he was confident in his data and reasoning.

Always remember that price is what you pay and value is what you get. According Fool.com, a fantastic business like Google (Nasdaq:GOOG ) is undervalued at one price, fairly valued at another, and overvalued at
yet another. At the current price, investors in Google are sacrificing a margin of safety and betting on the continuance of very high growth rates, which we know simply cannot go on forever. It’s one thing for a company like Google to double profits from $2 billion to $4 billion, but it’s much more difficult to go from $20 billion to $40 billion.

According to silver analyst Jerome Smith, who wrote in his book “Silver Profits in the Seventies”, more than 30 years ago “Truly outstanding investment opportunities occur only occasionally. In general, the better they are, the rarer they are. Such opportunities are normally long-term in their maturation and by careful study can be foreseen long before they come to the attention of most investors. … The very highest profit potentials occur whenever there is a convergence of two or more primary causes.”

Smith was referring to silver, but his words also characterize the qualities of superior investments that true value investors seek to exploit. Smith is right: Really good investment ideas are rare. So when you find one, bet big. If your thorough analysis is correct and the price is right, you should have no hesitation in investing heavily.

Consider Mohnish Pabrai of Pabrai Investment Funds. Pabrai currently manages about $600 million or so, up from $1 million in 1999. About 80% of that total is parked in just eight to 10 of Pabrai’s best investment ideas. The result is a 29% net annualized return since inception, meaning that a $100,000 investment back in 1999 is worth almost $800,000 today.

If your convictions won’t allow you to put 10% of your assets in one investment, you probably don’t need to have even 1% of your assets invested. But that’s why such obvious investments are so rare, and when your data and reasoning are correct, be sure to take advantage of the opportunity.

Buying good businesses at bargain prices allows the investor to ride out a storm relatively unscathed. But sound investing is not easy. The key is to train yourself to be unemotional about the market and maintain an unwavering level of discipline. History has shown that there will always be periods of prosperity followed by periods of economic contraction. That will never change. If you invest with the aim of keeping your capital, the upside will take care of itself.

The Weakening Dollar – II

Now we’ve seen some reasons for the Dollar’s continued weakening, how do we profit from this knowledge? Here’s a compendium of worthwhile investments that I’ve been researching.

  • Invest in foreign currencies and foreign bonds

If your bank allows you to make foreign currency deposits, that may be the simplest solution. You should avoid the sterling, as Britain is already facing many of the same problems as the United States (a hyper-inflated real-estate market, and an over-abundance of financial services). European euros and Japanese yen are probably the best bets in individual currencies, although there’s also a case for Canadian dollars, which have eclipsed parity with U.S. currency thanks to Canada’s powerful natural resources sector.

One possible international-bond mutual fund is the no-load T. Rowe Price International Bond Fund (Nasdaq:RPIBX), which invests in high-quality, non-dollar-denominated bonds.Let us issue two warnings. First, don’t buy bond funds investing in foreign junk bonds (because you’ve then put yourself in the same position as the asleep-at-the-switch German banks that invested in subprime mortgages – you don’t know what you’re getting). Second, don’t buy an emerging-markets bond fund, because emerging-markets bond portfolios, unlike stock portfolios, tend to be dominated by the countries with the most debt, which are consequently are the countries most in danger of defaulting.

  • Invest in large-cap stocks with foreign exposure

The stocks will benefit from the weak dollar in three ways:

  • First, if they do business as local companies overseas, their assets and income in foreign countries will be worth more in dollars.
  • Second, if they export from the U.S., their income will go up relative to their costs – a wonderful position to be in.
  • And third, the falling dollar actually makes the price of their exported products go down in foreign-currency terms, which makes these U.S. wares more competitive in foreign markets and against rivaling products. That could boost sales outright.

There are lots of these companies. Three terrific choices would be The Coca Cola Co. (NYSE:KO), which does business all over the world, The Boeing Co. (NYSE:BA), which is the United States’ largest exporter, and restaurant-operator Yum! Brands Inc. (NYSE: YUM), which boasts such great brands as KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell. Both Coke and Yum! are going great guns globally, and both boast excellent brand recognition in such key markets as China. Boeing will benefit from a huge upswing in air travel as global markets develop: It recently forecasted a need for $340 billion worth of commercial aircraft in China alone over the next 20 years. All three stocks are currently trading at Price/Earnings (P/E) ratios greater than 20, but the earnings should be strong.

  • Look at Eastern Europe

In Europe, the rising euro is likely to make Western Europe increasingly uncompetitive, by boosting its costs. In addition, several Western European countries – most notably, Britain, Spain and Ireland – have recently had housing bubbles even larger than the United States in relative terms, and as a result may suffer accordingly. A much better bet is the emerging growth area of Eastern Europe and Turkey, the latter benefiting from the improved political links and growing trade with the EU. Since Eastern Europe has much lower labor costs than the EU, as well as solid educational systems, the synergies are obvious. There are very few American Depository Receipts (ADRs) from the region, so the best bet for emerging Europe investors is the Spider Standard & Poor’s Emerging Europe ETF (AMEX:GUR), which invests in the share indexes of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Russia and Turkey. However, this ETF was founded only in March 2007, and currently has a market capitalization of only $29 million.

  • Invest in Brazil

At first glance, Latin America offers only modest potential to benefit from a declining dollar, because that region’s economies are so closely tied in with the United States and its currencies generally follow the dollar – albeit with a few crises all of its own. However, since non-U.S. growth is a powerful driver of global-natural-resource prices, it is desirable to take advantage of Latin America’s huge base of natural resources [although the populist tendencies of the local politicians can make this risky]. Currently, the most-economically-sound countries in that region are Brazil and Colombia, both of which have recently shown signs of better government and genuine economic growth. Therefore, it well worth considering either, or both, of two Brazilian ventures: Either mining company Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, sometimes referred to as CVRD (NYSE:RIO), or the oil company Petroleo Brasilero S.A (NYSE:PBR), more commonly referred to as Petrobras. Both companies are trading at reasonable earnings multiples (15 for CVRD and 13 for Petrobras), and each stands to benefit both from local economic and population growth, as well as from the insatiable-and-growing world demand for commodities and energy.

  • Invest in India

Asia is most certainly the world’s most dominant growth region – not only for the last five years, but also for the next 25. Unfortunately, both of the two fastest-growing Asian markets, China and India, are richly valued at present. Both countries are also dependent on exports to the United States, so would suffer margin erosion in the event of a very weak dollar. Indeed, China equities are somewhat pricey at the moment, but India is somewhat cheaper, with a P/E ratio of around 20, very reasonable given the Indian economy’s persistent 8% growth rate.Picking individual stocks is difficult, and there are not many with ADRs that U.S. individual investors can trade. Fortunately, there is an ETF that invests in the Indian portion of the Morgan Stanley Capital International share index – the iPath MSCI India Index fund (NYSE:INP), which is satisfactorily large at $366 million.

  • Invest In Japan

In Asia, take a look at the four most developed economies: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore. All of these countries have living standards close to that the of the United States, while Korea, Taiwan and Singapore still boast exciting rates of economic and productivity growth. However, if your intention is to hedge your holdings against a declining dollar, Taiwan and Singapore may not be the best bets, because they are both relatively small domestic markets with high export dependence on the U.S. economy.Japan, on the other hand, is the world’s second-largest economy, and has only recently gotten back on the growth track after a decade of recession caused by its late-1980s speculative bubble. A weak-dollar strategy should focus on the smaller Japanese companies, since they would benefit from domestic Japanese growth, meaning their profits are not tied to exports. Hence my recommendation would be the streetTracks SmallCap Japan ETF (AMEX:JSC), an index fund devoted to smaller Japanese companies.

  • Invest in Korea

South Korea is a rapidly growing economy whose stocks are currently selling at a very attractive multiple of around 12 times earnings. And there are a number of waves to catch in that market, as the country is a major global player – if not an outright leader – in such areas as telecommunications and heavy manufacturing.There’s one other point that’s worth noting – and it’s a significant one. In late October, U.S. investing guru Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B), paid his first visit to South Korea, where the billionaire has invested in 20 of that countries companies, including a 4% stake in the country’s leading steelmaker, (NYSE: PKX). Buffett definitely sees Korea as a worthwhile market.

Two ways to invest in Korea is either through the Korea Fund (KF) or the iShares MSCI South Korea Index Fund ETF (EWY).

  • Buy Gold

After Gold’s recent surge to over $800/oz, you might think its run is over. But with the global liquidity crisis and all major currencies inflating the currencies, gold has become a safe haven for risk-averse investors. During the last gold-bull market in the early 80’s, gold peaked at $850/oz. Adjusted for inflation, that works out to $2,200/oz today. Gold still has a long way to run.

  • Buy Canadian Resource Companies

While the oil produced in Canada isn’t as cheap as that produced in Saudia Arabia ($30 vs $2), with oil hitting nearly $100/barrel, its still very profitable.

These are some of the multiple ways you can hedge your portfolio against the falling dollar. Remember, the worst thing to do is to ignore it and do nothing!

Ben Stein Long On Financials

I was in Los Angeles for the past several days. While spending several hours parked on the 405 freeway I heard Ben Stein on the radio. He thinks financial stocks have been beaten up and are great values right now (as of November 13th 2007).

He recommended buying a financial sector ETF. I think he mentioned Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF). He thinks stocks like Citigroup (C) and Bank of America (BAC) aren’t going to go bankrupt and the market is over-reating. Thats quite a contrast in opinion from last week’s comment by Jim Rogers, who’s short the financial sector via ETFs.

While I didn’t jump in and buy either Citigroup or Bank of America, I did close my positions in UltraShort Financials ProShares (SKF) and UltraShort QQQ ProShares (QID) yesterday for a slight gain. I’m still not convinced enough to go long though.

Stein also recommends buying Energy Select Sector SPDR (XLE) . I’m long on the energy sector ad I think XLE will probably do well. However, I’m already heavily weighted in Canroys and direct oil-gas drilling programs so I’ll stay out of XLE too.

Is It Time To Short General Motors?

General Motors (GM) announced a $39 Billion loss last week. Considering that its Market Cap is around $18 Billion, that’s a  loss that is twice the value of the entire company!

 The CEO tried to soften the impact of the loss by claiming it was a tax-related, non-cash write-down.  They were infact carry-over tax losses that the bean-counters insist GM consider as a loss. Typically, tax losses are carried as assets (or so I’ve heard) and are used to offset the tax impacts of profits.

But GM has had a loss in the past 19 out 20 years (I think I read somewhere that the losses totalled $275 Billion), its market share has been dropping every year and its losing money on every car it sold. The only money it was making was from its very profitable financing department GMAC that was used to finance cars and houses. But the financing profits are starting to dry up as the economy starts to fall apart.

Its being forced to borrow more and more money every years in order to stay afloat. And the cost of its interest is rising.

It seems the accountants decided that GM cannot make a profit in the immediate future and is likely to go bankrupt. So they forced the company to take the “non-cash tax-loss” as a write-down, since there won’t be any profits to write them off.

So I think its time to start shorting GM.  I haven’t always had success shorting stocks. I shorted Countrywide (CFC) and WCI Communities (WCI) a few months too early and took losses, instead of large profits.  So I’ll be a little cautious about entering the trade on this one, but I still think there’s a chance GM might infact go bankrupt.

Jim Rogers Short On US Financials

Jim Rogers doesn’t have any faith in the US financial companies. According to Bloomberg:

Jim Rogers, co-founder of the Quantum Hedge Fund with billionaire George Soros, boosted his bets against U.S. securities firms because of their salary “excesses” and money-losing investments.

Rogers said he increased his year-old short positions in the past six weeks in U.S. investment banks, using exchange-traded funds and bets against individual companies he declined to name. Stocks in the industry, which pays too much in bonuses, may fall as much as 70 percent in a bear market, he said.

“You see 29-year-olds on Wall Street making $10 million to $20 million a year, and they think it’s normal,” Rogers, 65, said in an interview in London today.

The top five U.S. securities firms will probably earn a combined $29.3 billion this year, according to analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, breaking a three-year record streak after Merrill Lynch & Co. reported a $2.2 billion third-quarter loss. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley, Merrill, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. earned $30.7 billion last year, three times more than their profit in 2002.

Goldman Sachs, Wall Street’s most-profitable securities firm, said Sept. 20 that it set aside $16.9 billion to pay salaries, benefits and bonuses in the first nine months of the year, topping the record amount for all of last year.

A month later, Merrill Lynch reported its biggest quarterly loss amid $8.4 billion of writedowns for subprime mortgages, asset-backed bonds and bad loans.

Jim Rogers is short via the use of ETFs. One way you can get in on the action is through UltraShort Financials ProShares (SKF). SKF is a leveraged ETF that returns twice the daily inverse of the Dow Jones Financials Index.

Recently financials like Bank of America, Citigroup and Bear Stearns have reported pretty bad news. Seems like SKF would be a safer bet than shorting any of these companies themselves.

Time To Invest In Mutual Funds?

I was reading this article from the New York Times by Tim Gray called “Three Strategies That Kept Sizzling:

Ken Heebner, manager of CGM Focus, achieved a double distinction with his fund. He placed among the top performers for the most recent quarter and the five-year period. For the quarter, CGM Focus, which invests mainly in large-capitalization domestic stocks, returned 30.3 percent, while for the five years ended Sept. 30, it returned 32.9 percent, annualized.

Mr. Heebner’s offering isn’t for the faint-hearted. He shovels shareholders’ money into relatively few stocks  23 in late September and rapidly zips in and out of investments. When I buy a stock I say, What factors would cause me to change my view? he said.  If I see them, I immediately sell. And if I see something I like better, I immediately sell. If there?s an emerging opportunity, I don’t want to miss it.

As a result, his portfolio has a higher-than-average annual turnover rate 333 percent, versus 90 percent for the average stock mutual fund, according to Morningstar. His returns also zigzag more than those of other funds in his Morningstar peer group.

Mr. Heebner sniffs out trends economic, social or demographic and then tries to find well-run companies poised to benefit from them. Lately, that has meant loading up on energy shares. On June 30, the most recent date for which data is available, he held the American depositary receipts of Petroleo Brasileiro, the giant Brazilian oil company, and Cnooc, one of China’s big producers, as well as shares in several oil services outfits. Energy stocks accounted for a third of his portfolio.

If you can live with that sort of volatility, you might get some terrific gains. Note, however in 2002, the Fund was down 28%. But for 2007 its up a whopping 60%!!!! Makes my 18% return seem extremely pathetic in comparison!

I was also looking at buying TAVFX which buys undervalued companies. But its returns have been less than mine and they require a $10,000 minimum to invest in. But its a lot less volatile, but with it comes a lower return.

Friday Rant

I came across this article last night, 32 Reasons Why The Stock Market Will Jump This Year.

While its written as a serious prediction, I personally feel its more like a christmas wish list or a list of finalist answers at the Miss World Beauty Pagent!. Here are some of the gems

#1. Housing and Auto-manufacturing weakness will subside
Based on what? Major layoffs in both industries?

#5. Unemployment with stay at record lows.
Hmm…with the massive layoffs in Housing and Auto-manufacturing, you really think so?

#7. Inflation will continue to decelerate, with CPI averaging around 2.0%.
Hmm…ever since the minimum wage was jacked up, small business around where I live jacked up the price of everything along with it. That doesn’t sound like low inflation to me. Anyone who thinks that CPI is an accurate measure of inflation makes way too much money to begin with. Once you take out all the factors that cause inflation, of course you’ll be left with 2%. What a doofus.

#11. The US Dollar will firmer up and even maybe become stronger
With almost all the worlds major currencies strengthening against the USD how is this going to happen? Oh yeah, Bank of Japan is enforcing a weak Yen policy. And of course the USD will strengthen against the Iraqi Dinar! And with China owning a Trillion USD do you think a strong Dollar is actually in our interest????

#12. The U.S. budget deficit, which is currently 1.5% of GDP, well below the 40-year average of 2.3% of GDP, will continue to trend lower as healthy economic activity continues to boost tax receipts substantially more than estimates.
Uh…isn’t the US GDP is currently mainly comprised of government spending? Thats not really a show of healthy economic activity. Although it is true that the tax receipts are up more than estimated.

#15. The mania for commodities will completely end.
Yeah Right!!! All those millions of people in India and China who can now afford to buy a car and a decent place to live will choose to buy plastic go-karts and tents instead of regular cars and houses that use steel & copper. Is he completely blind to the global industrialization thats taking place? Every year China adds to its electricity generating capacity by the same amount as the entire UK. This electricity comes from coal and is used to make more cars and power more houses. The dude’s smoking crack now.

#16. Oil falls to $35 to $40 per barrel and eventually $20-$25.
#19. Gas prices will drop below $4/mcf.
#20. Gold will drop below $550 per ounce
This was written on the 1st of Feb 2007 when Oil was around $50/barrel. Its since gone up to nearly $60 and is probably on its way up. Corn has quadrupled to over $4/bushel making ethanol almost as expensive as gasoline now. Similarly Gold is also up to $665. I actually bought some GLD (the gold ETF) 2 days ago and I’m already up 7%. I predict its going to $800 in 2 years.

#17. Peace in the Middle East.
HAHAHA.

Some of the points are actually valid, but the ones I’ve mentioned are pretty stupid. Like I’ve said before, I’ve taken exactly opposite bets in my stock investing, so of course my views are out of line with the authors.

What do you think?

Canadian Royalties Revisited

A few weeks ago, I cursed the Canadian Finance Minister for causing my CanRoys to drop significantly overnight. I may have been premature in cursing him.

I originally bought them for the dividends that they were paying out, mostly in the 8-12% range, with the occasional one paying out 13-14%. However, the severe drop in prices caused their yields to jump proportionately to 12-17%. One of the companies I bought became a 19% yield! Even if Flaherty’s taxation of dividends became true, it would still be 4 years away and by then you would’ve gotten nearly 80% of your money back. Last week money started flowing back in Canroys. I picked up a little more on margin. The one I picked up, AAV currently gives a 17% yield. So even if I have to pay 9-10% margin interest I’m still ahead by 7%. Plus if Oil & Gas prices continue to rise which I think they will I’ll see some capital appreciation.

There are a few Master Lease Partnerships in the US that are like Mutual Funds of Energy Stocks. They only pay 6% dividends however the divis are considered return of principle and thus are not taxed!!! Pretty sweet deal if you ask me.