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2008 Financial Crisis: Profit From the Next Panic

February 13, 2018 by Frugal Prof

 

The purpose of looking back at the 2008 Financial Crisis is to learn to make better investment decisions the next time a crisis comes.  Making smart decisions during a crisis can lead to tremendous gains that cannot be achieved during any other time in the investing cycle.

The next crisis will present great opportunities for the investor willing to buy when others are panicking.

 

September 2008: The Financial Crisis

A tumultuous time on Wall Street (September 24, 2008):

  • Late Sunday, both Goldman (GS) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE symbol MS),Fortune 500, were converted into bank holding companies by federal regulators, effectively closing the book on the stand-alone investment bank business model.
  • Just a day earlier, Morgan agreed to sell up to a fifth of the company to Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (NYSE: symbol MTU), one of Japan’s largest banks.
  • Merrill Lynch was acquired by Bank of America (Stock symbol: BAC) .Fortune 500 (via CNN).

 

Value Investing

 

During the 2008 financial crisis, I decided to re-read The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham since things were very chaotic and I found it immensely helpful.

As most investors know, Benjamin Graham is known for having taught Warren Buffet about value investing.

The book is the Bible of value investing.

It is a template of how to filter the market for stocks that are truly undervalued. By using the principles in the book, many prominent investors like Warren Buffett have made significant fortunes in the stock market and avoided the losses and frustrations of average investors.

More on Benjamin Graham here.

As an avid follower of both Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett, I was reminded that they often invested in bonds or preferred stock of companies depending on the situation.

As you will see, I found this flexibility to be a big asset.

This allows an investor to decide the best strategy based on risk and return.

Moving up the capital structure can be a big advantage for an investor during a financial crisis or panic, since it reduces the overall risk in the investment portfolio.

 




 

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Investing - Wall Street

 

Buffett takes a stake in Goldman Sachs:

Buffett agreed to purchase preferred stock, which worked out much better for his investment in the company. This allowed him to receive dividends on the shares.

Goldman, Sachs (GS) will sell $5 billion of preferred stock to the insurance and investment giant, which will also receive warrants to purchase $5 billion of common stock with a strike price of $115 per share, the company said.

Berkshire (BRK.A, Fortune 500) has five years to exercise the warrants.

Buffett will be paid a 10% dividend on his shares.

Warren Buffett (via  Berkshire Hathaway) moved up the capital structure when he negotiated his transaction with Goldman, Sachs & Co.

And these dividends enabled him to outperform the performance of the common stock.

 

If I didn’t think the government was going to act, I would not be doing anything this week,  Buffett told CNBC. “It would be a mistake to be buying anything now if the government was going to walk away from the Paulson proposal.”

 

Value Investing

 

Genworth: (GNW):

An undervalued insurance giant.

In the financial crisis, instead of buying common stock, I looked at preferred stock, bonds, or used options to hedge. This allowed me to keep adding undervalued investments to my portfolio in an uncertain time and be comfortable with the overall risk.  Genworth is provided as an example.  (via Morningstar)

Based on the price to cash flow, the current ratio, and the price to book, Genworth’s stock was already on my radar as an undervalued situation.

The decision to opt for the bonds was an attempt to move up the capital structure and take less risk as the uncertainty of how the financial crisis would play out was very much on my mind and created an added level of worry. In addition, the large debt level was a concern and made the common stock less attractive and riskier.

Genworth: Bonds Vs. Stock

 

It seemed a good strategy in individual situations and in my overall portfolio to move up the capital structure, as Warren Buffett had done.

 

I decided to purchase the Genworth bonds (6.515% 2018) and paid 63 cents on the dollar during the financial crisis in October 2008.

As we see from the price action of the bonds, I was very early and could have purchased the bonds much later at a bargain price of 23 cents on the dollar. In hindsight, the best move I could have made was to sell the common stock (even at a loss) and purchase more bonds at 23.

However, it also speaks to the volatility of the financial crisis. I purchased a bond I thought was attractive at 63. Within a few weeks, as the crisis worsens, the bonds had plummeted to 23 cents on the dollar, a massive paper loss.

 

 

 

GNW Chart

 

GNW Stock

I also purchased a small amount of stock and sold calls against the position. I made money on the shares and they were called away some time later. Because I owned the bonds, I didn’t want to have too much exposure to one name, so I let the shares get called away.

In the end, the bonds recovered and paid a healthy 13.49% yield for the past eight years and now trade above par at $102.50. The stock has had a couple of spikes in price into the teens, but is again back at the $3 level. It’s been a very difficult decade for Genworth shares.

The lack of progress in the shares since the financial crisis is striking. I now view Genworth as a classic value trap, a stock that has been perennially undervalued: lacks enough earnings power and cash flow to create value for shareholders, or a buyer willing to pay a significant premium.

The goal is not just to own an undervalued security. The goal is to profit from investing with a margin of safety. Over the past eight years, it was very difficult for any value investor to profit from owning Genworth shares.

This scenario is why a call selling strategy can be very helpful to the investor.

 

Washington Mutual: Unknown Investment Risks

At $2, I estimated the risk/ reward in Washington Mutual Preferreds to be 1,000% (not including dividends) on the upside with the potential of a 40% loss. Even with what I considered to be a very favorable risk/reward I kept my position size small.

My position in the Genworth bonds was five times the size of my position in WaMu.

It was a good speculation. I felt that the company had value since TPG, a prominent  global investment firm, and others were willing to bid on the company. But it had too much debt and risk for me to invest in the common shares.

WaMu Is Seized, Sold Off to J.P. Morgan, In Largest Failure in U.S. Banking History (Wall Street Journal)

In hindsight, as I read Warren Buffett’s previous quote, I realize he had a much better grasp on the investment situation than I did. He was not going to act in an investment during the crisis without some type of government approval.

The government had given an indication it would support Goldman Sachs via the TARP program. No such assurances or indications were ever given on Washington Mutual.

Moving up the capital structure didn’t protect the investor in this situation. I purchased the Preferred Shares in Washington Mutual along with some very successful hedge fund managers (David Bonderman and TPG).

The known risk was bankruptcy. The unknown risk was government intervention.

The end result was an orchestrated seizure of the bank and arranged sale, which wiped out both the equity holders and the preferred shareholders.

 

Value Investing

(Sept. 26, 2008 WaMu is Seized)

  • The collapse of the Seattle thrift, which was triggered by a wave of deposit withdrawals, marks a new low point in the country’s financial crisis. But the deal, as constructed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., could hold some glimmers of hope for the beleaguered banking system because it averts any hit to the bank-insurance fund. All WaMu depositors will have access to their cash, but holders of more than $30 billion in debt and preferred stock will likely see little if any recovery.
  • In March,  J.P. Morgan offered to acquire WaMu but was spurned in favor of a $7 billion infusion led by the private-equity firm TPG, considered one of the savviest buyout firms. TPG, led by investor David Bonderman, said it will lose $1.35 billion, wiping out its investment.  (via WSJ)

 

Ego and Investing

Every investor dreams of a huge winner. And both Washington Mutual and Genworth seemed to have those characteristics.

Being able to tell people for years to come that I purchased the shares at $3 and have the stock at $20, $30, or higher would be great for my ego. However, I gave up on bragging rights to the situation when I bought the bonds. No one brags about buying bonds. But being able to measure risk and reward and keep my ego out of the decision was very helpful in hindsight.

In fact, looking at the performance of the S&P 500, Goldman Sachs and Genworth, it is striking how little reward Genworth shareholders received from buying during the crisis. However, the Genworth shareholders fared much better than the Washington Mutual preferreds, which were a complete loss.

 

GNW Chart

 

 

 

Conclusion

The 2008 financial crisis provides many important lessons for investors on investing, risk, position sizing, moving up the capital structure, unknown risks, and security selection.  Learning from prominent investors like Warren Buffett and Benjamin Graham is always enlightening an helpful for the investor.

One never knows when another crisis will occur and create opportunities for the intelligent investor.

 






Filed Under: Investing, Uncategorized Tagged With: 2008 financial crisis, benjamin graham, margin of safety, Stocks, value investing, warren buffett

Investing: The risk to the current stock market no one talks about

March 2, 2017 by Frugal Prof

 

current stock market

I’m sure you agree that the current stock market has been on quite a winning streak now.  The stock market has gained nearly 25% under President Trump.

The Dow Jones Average just crossed the 26K milestone.  And while that may seem like good news, it is smart to evaluate the risks to the current stock market.

Here are some contrarian views on the stock market and major indexes.

In my view, the risk to the stock market is not a crash, but a more nuanced scenario for stock investors.

 

For most stock investors, the risks to the stock market are rarely discussed.  Here is my view of the risk to investors from the current stock market in the coming years.

Current stock market:  So here we are ~ Dow 26K.

  • Let’s review how we got here:
  • The financial experts predicted a stock market crash if Brexit passed.
  • It did and investors shrugged it off.
  • Then the stock market strategists warned us that if Donald Trump was elected, the stock market would crash.
  • The market has since rallied 12-15% to new highs in every index. Even cyber currencies like bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, and  etherium are at new highs.  And here we are at very rich valuations compared to historical stock prices.

 

How did the stock makret crash

 

Most mutual fund managers were underinvested heading into the election.

Since Trump’s improbable win, professional investors have been playing catch up– trying to get invested in a stock market that has not fallen by more than 1% on any day for a month- something that hasn’t happened in 54 years.  This applies to the S and P 500 as well as the Dow Jones Average, the major stock market indexes.  Stock market Volatility has been crushed.

 

 

 

 

Retail is Bullish: Individual Investors

Individual Investors are pouring money into this market.  Discount firms TD Ameritrade (AMTD) and E-Trade (ETFC) are seeing a huge appetite for stocks by retail investors.

Inflows to mutual funds and ETF’s hit $32B through last Wednesday, the largest inflows since 2002. 

ETF’s focused on Bitcoin shares have received $258M in a matter of days.  All retail brokerages are seeing new account openings fueled by millennials and those who fear missing out.

For seasoned investors, this is reminiscent of boom days gone by.  We don’t know how these new investors will react when volatility returns to the market.  But, retail excitement is almost always a sign that the easy money has been made.  And in my opinion, passive investing may exacerbate a downturn.

 

Investing - Wall Street

 

Davos Is Bullish:

“There are 2,000 people [here in Davos], and I don’t think I’ve met one person who’s been negative,”  -Billionaire Jeff Greene (NASDAQ:CNBC)

 

Stock Valuations are very stretched.  

Depending on the figure, we are at nearly 26X earnings on the S&P 500.  Levels last seen in 1929, 1999, and 2008.

This means the current stock market via the S&P 500 index  is expensive. However, due to the intervention by the Federal Reserve  in the bond market, the stock market is viewed as the only alternative for most investors.  This is a very unnatural situation. As a value stock investor, I can tell you there are hardly any undervalued stocks on the New York Stock Exchange.  Very few stocks are undervalued.  Investors may ask, “Is the stock market going to crash?”

The risk is not a stock market crash.  The real risk is that 7-10 years from now, we are still at or below 2400 on the S&P 500  or 21,000 on the Dow Jones Average.

 

Why?  The Federal Reserve, the Central Bank which essentially controls interest rates,  has used emergency level interest rates going on 7 years.  This was used to stimulate the economy due to the financial crisis. The federal reserve has a $4B balance sheet.

Interest rates have been at historic lows.  This has boosted stocks and real estate artificially.

Pulling future gains to the present.  If we have taken future returns, then future returns should be lower going forward.

The fed has been artificially supporting the market. We don’t know what will happen when they unwind their balance sheet and rates return to normal levels.

 

Artificial support.

 

 

My stock market analogy:

When I ran this morning, I cheated a little bit.  After I ran, I was walking on the treadmill, but was holding on to the side rails.  It’s cheating.  My arms were supporting my body.  That’s what the fed actions and the stock buybacks have created.  It’s artificial support.

 

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Value Investing

 

Are companies doing well?  Yes and No.  They’re shrinking their shares outstanding by buying back stock.  Where does the money come from?  Mostly from issuing bonds aided by low interest rates.

Stock Buybacks used to be done exclusively by companies that felt their shares were undervalued.  Today, almost every major buyback is being done at all time highs.

Think about that.  “Were buying back our stock because it’s undervalued … at All Time Highs!”

I’m not impressed.

There is a big difference between running 5 miles and walking 5 miles holding the side rails of a treadmill. This market has been sustained for far too long with artificial support.  I’m cautious and skeptical.

 

 

My intention is not to scare investors.  However, smart investors need to consider that the risks to the stock market do not just include some stock market crash like we experienced in 1987 or 2008.

The more significant fear for investors is something more devastating:  a return to normal returns and potentially, much lower rates of return for stock market investors.  The Federal Reserve has been helping investors for nearly a decade.  When they remove the artificial stimulus, rates of return may fall and create a disappointing climate for stock market investors for many years.

 

 



 

 

 




Filed Under: Blog, Investing Tagged With: crash, current stock market, federal reserve, investing, Investors, mutualfunds, new york stock exchange, s and p 500, stock market crash, Stockmarket, Stocks

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