Lessons for Investors and Entrepreneurs: The Nature of Value

It is always fun to read a book that is useful for investors and entrepreneurs/businesspeople. Nick Gogerty’s The Nature of Value covers a lot of ground—below I quote and highlight some of the most useful lessons and idea from the book. I also met Nick last week, and it helps that he is a very nice and smart guy.

VALUE, IN THE SIMPLEST sense, is the human perception of what is important. As such, it is subjective and context dependent.

I have to remind myself often that market prices are a collective opinion or perception, and that the only sustainable advantage in investing is finding perception (price)/reality gaps. The book talks a lot about changes in the perception of value, and how quickly a hot technology can fade away, its value diminished.

Evolution…favors the energy efficient.

all things can be considered dissipative structures—that is, all forms evolve for energy to flow through at increasing levels of efficiency. We will see that the study of evolution across economic and ecological domains is actually the study of dissipative structures adapting over time and through selective processes.

I love Peter Thiel’s definition of technology which “to do more with less.” This is a key lesson for the entrepreneur (companies like Uber and Airbnb--efficiency machines--best exemplify these ideas), but also for businesspeople. Companies tend to add layers of bloat over time and must constantly fight this slowly accumulated business baggage. It’s very hard to innovate as companies get older and older. Gogerty continues:

Innovation, as suggested, is both a giver and a destroyer of value. The entrepreneur—and society—sees innovation as a positive option that can potentially deliver new forms of value. But innovation expressed outside one’s own firm is a negative option viewed from the firm’s perspective. A competitor’s positive option can kill other firms. This negative optionality is unpredictable and extremely difficult to avoid. The allocator must guess the scope and scale of negative options that may be created by others. Firms with well-known fat margins can become negative option magnets, attracting entrepreneurs.

Negative options look like radical innovation to existing competitors. James M. Utterback, an MIT professor of innovation, has done in-depth innovation research and said the following about radical innovation and corporate death. A product’s life could end quite suddenly with the appearance of a radical new competing product that invades and quickly conquers the market. Not many firms have the dexterity to retool their capabilities in order to survive successive waves of innovation. Over the life of a product, few of the firms that enter the market to produce the product survive. Firms holding the largest market share in one generation of a product or process seldom appear in the vanguard of competition in the next.

This means that, surprisingly, no technology leader managed to hold onto the lead in the next iteration. For an investor in the technology sector, the leading firm must provide incredibly high returns on equity due to the short value-creating life span. Innovation-led companies are often severely overpriced, with little regard for the forces of negative optionality that lead to short life spans. Looking at the big picture over time makes this obvious. Focusing on today’s single “lottery ticket” firm ignores the silent negative options held by others.

One of the best finds in the book is a list of ten aspects of innovation made famous by the Doblin Group. If you work at a business or plan on starting one, going through this list is very valuable. Check it out here. You want to be unique in as many of these ten ways as possible. Having just one or two advantages probably won’t cut it:

Businesses that rely on a single unique capability for market share or margins are highly vulnerable to negative optionality (we explore businesses like this in chapter 6, in the discussion of “hero products”). Many technology firms fall into this category, and thus are weak candidates for sustainable value creation and capital allocation. Paradoxically, many of these firms are mispriced at high earnings multiples.

This story about Mark Twain reminds me of the cautious tale of automobile companies (which consolidated from more than one hundred to three major companies). Someone with a crystal ball about future technology might still fail to make any money from their knowledge of the future because competition is so fierce and it is hard to pick the winners!

History is filled with famous lottery ticket betters. The author Mark Twain was an early venture capitalist. He correctly saw the potential of the early typewriter, and invested in it. The typewriter flourished as a smash hit product for over a century, but the particular firm Twain bet on didn’t last long. Twain lost so much money he was forced to go on a global speaking tour to recoup his losses.

I also found lots of subtle references to the idea of shareholder yield investing (which is a preference for disciplined capital allocation).

Investors should beware, as well, of firms that are pushing innovation simply for the sake of innovation. This is usually nothing more than costly activity, driven by fear, masquerading as productivity. Bad innovation like this happens all the time, and is endemic at firms where analysts, boards of directors, and shareholders insist on “pushing the envelope” and keeping up with R&D initiatives regardless of the return on invested capital (ROIC). Activity like this may push share prices up in the short term, but it does not create value.

A typical organizational response to the cluster death process is to fight to the last penny even as it destroys shareholder equity, which is perversely considered more noble than quitting and handing back shareholder capital.

Allocators should seek long capability-cycle processes with fast, efficient cash flow turnover cycles. Expanding on the biological metaphor, bet on a slow, stable niche and a stable, quick-learning species within that niche that survives and thrives relative to others.

Our research shows that these ideas are right. Companies paying down stakeholders (buybacks, debt payback) significantly outperform those issuing new capital.

Finally here are some fun fast quotes from the book. I highly recommend it.

Remember Henry Ford’s saying that many people missed opportunity, because it showed up dressed in overalls and looked like work. [I always thought this was Edison, but forget it, he’s rolling]

Having the best product doesn’t matter. Efficiently delivering the best perceived user experience is what determines survival.

A cheap ticket on a sinking ship is never cheap enough to make the ride worthwhile. [i.e. a value strategy can probably be improved using other metrics—avoid the absolute worst quality can help in some situations…more posts on this in the future]

I suggest books like this once per month to members of the book club, you can sign up here.

 

My Five Favorite Investing Books

I recently asked a number of my favorite writers to list their five favorite investing books. You can read the fantastic list that resulted here. For this month’s reading list, here are my five all-time favorites.

1.       What Works on Wall Street by James O’Shaughnessy—I am, of course, massively biased in this first selection but hear me out. I never like anything just because it was produced by someone well known or well regarded, my father included. But this book is a classic for two reasons. First, its early chapters give an excellent overview of the modern investor’s options and obstacles. These chapters (1-4) explain investor fallibility and how a model-based approach to investing can help investors overcome their inherent faults.  Second, the remainder of the book—the “data” chapters (5-29)—provide extensive evidence in favor of systematic investment strategies that favor value, quality, momentum and yield. My entire personal portfolio is dedicated to these ideas.

2.       Inside the Investor’s Brain by Richard Peterson—this is the best book on investor behavior that I’ve ever read. It is like Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow¸ but specific to investing. It is comprehensive, entertaining, and chock full of stories and examples that I use on a weekly basis.

3.       The (mis)Behavior of Markets by Benoit Mandelbrot—A unique take on (and dismantling of) the efficient market hypothesis. I adopted and extended my favorite chart ever from his book, shown below.

4.       Contrarian Investment Strategies by David Dreman—this was one of the first books I read on investing when I was 22 and remains one of the best. It reveals “forecasters” as charlatans, highlights the contrary nature of the most successful investing strategies, and proposes concrete strategies for outmaneuvering the market.

5.       Devil Take the Hindmost by Edward Chancellor—No investing education is complete without a healthy dose of history. Chancellor’s book is—BY FAR—the best collection of investing history lessons ever compiled. Learning from your own mistakes is great, but learning from the mistakes of others is even better. This is the most entertaining book on the list. 

The Best Investing Books Ever

I've only been posting here for a few months, but already I've learned that the most valuable part of writing online is meeting smart, interesting people and learning from them. I learn mostly through books, so I've asked a bunch of my favorite writers what their all-time favorite investing books are. I love the list that has resulted from the first group of respondents. Here is a meta-curated list of the best investing books ever, from Meb Faber, Morgan Housel, Josh Brown, Michael Kitces, Michael Batnick, and Ben Carlson (full list below). My own top five will be the feature in June's book list, so sign up over here.

I've read most of these books (but did find some great suggestions that I didn't know of) and can attest that if you read each one, you would have an incredibly thorough and well rounded take on markets.  This is like a bachelor's and master's degree combined. Thanks to all the great writers who submitted books--hopefully this will be the first of several similar lists. 

THE BOOKS

The Worldly Philosophers by Robert Heilbroner 

Investing: The Last Liberal Art by Robert G. Hagstrom 

Backstage Wall Street by Joshua M. Brown

Irrational Exuberance (2nd Edition 2009) by Prof Robert J. Shiller

Simple Wealth, Inevitable Wealth (Fifth Edition 2013) by Nick Murray

Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Taleb

Unexpected Returns by Ed Easterling

Myth of the Rational Market by Justin Fox

Misbehavior of Markets by Benoit Mandelbrot

Against the Gods by Peter Bernstein

The Most Important Thing by Howard Marks

Your Money & Your Brain by Jason Zweig

The Warren Buffett Portfolio by Robert G. Hagstrom

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing by Jack Bogle

Poor Charlie's Almanac by Charlie Munger

The Intelligent Investor by Ben Graham

Market Wizards by Jack Schwager

Trend Following by Michael Covel

Bull! by Maggie Mahar

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefevre

Triumph of the Optimists by Dimson, Marsh and Staunton 

 

Clash of the Financial Pundits Reviewed

Punditry is all about concise sound bites, so before diving into a full review, my one sentence review of Josh Brown and Jeff Macke’s new book Clash of the Financial Pundits is “a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down.” This is a book that sneaks great investing advice and wisdom into your brain by sugar-coating it with great stories, good writing, and several fascinating interviews.

Jeff Macke asks the question early on:

But with it being the case that people can’t beat the market over time, wouldn’t that make punditry a little bit of a racket? What do you think of financial media? You’ve got this constant reporting, this buy on the short term; what are they going to earn this quarter? Is it just a mugs game from top to bottom?

Punditry plays to our primal instincts. We love punditry because it’s entertaining but also because we foolishly think that financial experts will give us some edge with what they say on TV. What we need is long term, steady advice, but what we get are “hot tips.” As Jim Rogers says

I try to spread this message all the time, Jeff. It doesn’t work. Everybody wants a hot tip. Everybody wants to be rich this afternoon. You can sit there all day long and say, “The emperor has no clothes.” Nobody wants to hear it. They all want a hot tip.

I loved the discussion of pundit intelligence and of the negative forecasters.  Smarter people do not necessarily make smarter predictions, even though it seems like they should. And, for some reason, being negative makes a pundit sound smarter even though markets have delivered mostly positive results over the long term. Henry Blodget points out, “For some reason, being negative always sounds smarter. I don’t know what it is about people, but I noticed this when I was an analyst as well. It’s easier to sound smart as a negative pundit.” Jeff Macke asks:

Is there a deadline on this prediction for the imminent apocalypse that’s going to come? Because you need a starting point, right? If we get a 25 percent correction now, that’s not going to go anywhere near taking back all the gains we’ve seen.  But most pundits refuse to say, “I was wrong.” No one is ever wrong. They’re “early.” Sometimes really, really early.

Brown and Macke continually point out that the same emotions that get us in trouble in the markets—greed and fear—are the most reliable ingredients to produce a hit piece of punditry. The main lesson I took from this book was that financial punditry can be great entertainment. But just like you shouldn’t go to Vegas to get rich, you shouldn’t make investing decisions based on sound bites. Take punditry for what it is, and you’ll be entertained and your portfolio will be no worse for wear.  But if you use the “expert” advice and forecasts that you hear on TV, you are in some serious trouble.

The interviews were great, but my favorites were Altucher (“The only way they fill up the space between commercials is by having either extreme fear or extreme greed”) and Ritholtz (“television is halfway between ESPN 4 and the weather channel . . .”).

I’ve just scratched the surface: there are tons of hidden gems throughout, which I won’t spoil here. James Altucher says, “What the audience thinks is that they want to learn something. But what they don’t realize is that they want the ice cream. It’s just like people in general. People think they want to eat healthy. Nobody wants to eat unhealthily. But at the end of the day people eat ice cream all day.” Ice cream is of course bad for you, but it’s enjoyable.  The trick this book pulls on the reader is that it is like ice cream that is somehow good for you.  I highly recommend it.

 

Reading List - May 2014

I've started a monthly reading list to share the best books that I've ever read. For the first few months I will also post the lists here to give you a sense for what they look like. If you'd like to receive these monthly recommendations, sign up for the reading list here. Also, if you have any favorite books, please send them my way. I'm always on the lookout for hidden gems.

This month, I've included four books. The first three are money/market focused, and the last is just an incredible book.  

Saving Capitalism From Short-Termism: How to Build Long-Term Value and Take Back Our Financial Future by Alfred Rappaport

Rappaport is an under-appreciated writer.  I discovered him through Michael Mauboussin, who lists Rappaport as an important influence. Mauboussin and Rappaport co-authored another book together called Expectations Investing. Saving Capitalism from Short-Termism explores the many problems that result from short-term thinking. I spend a chapter in my book on the same topic, which was in part inspired by this great book.

Here’s a passage on short-term thinking:

“The practice has persisted over the entire span of human history, from ancient days, when people didn’t live long enough to worry about the long term and focused on immediate needs, such as hunger, to today’s craving for instant gratification in the face of damaging long-term consequences. Drug abuse, overeating, smoking, and spending rather than saving are vestiges of that ancient attitude.” 


The Most Important Thing: Uncommon Sense for the Thoughtful Investor by Howard Marks

“To boil it all down to just one sentence, I’d say the necessary condition for the existence of bargains is that perception has to be considerably worse than reality.” 

Howard Marks rivals Warren Buffett when it comes to quality shareholder letters. This book is the best of those letters and ideas weaved together into a brilliant narrative.  One of my favorite books on value/distressed investing.

Here is a good passage:

“Unlike market darlings, the orphan asset is ignored or scorned. To the extent it’s mentioned at all by the media and at cocktail parties, it’s in unflattering terms. • Usually its price has been falling, making the first-level thinker ask, “Who would want to own that?” (It bears repeating that most investors extrapolate past performance, expecting the continuation of trends rather than the far-more-dependable regression to the mean. First-level thinkers tend to view past price weakness as worrisome, not as a sign that the asset has gotten cheaper.) • As a result, a bargain asset tends to be one that’s highly unpopular. Capital stays away from it or flees, and no one can think of a reason to own it.”


The History of Money by Jack Weatherford

Ever since finding this book, I’ve been fascinated with the history of money.  Weatherford's book is my favorite on the subject, because it is equally entertaining and informative. Money is arguably our most important invention, and it has changed a lot over the centuries. This is a great story that will make you think about your money and its future.  Weatherford’s book on Genghis Kahn is also fantastic.

“Humans have found many ways to bring order to the phenomenological flow of existence, and money is one of the most important. Money is strictly a human invention in that it is itself a metaphor; it stands for something else. It allows humans to structure life in incredibly complex ways that were not available to them before the invention of money. This metaphorical quality gives it a focal role in the organization of meaning in life. Money represents an infinitely expandable way of structuring value and social relationships—personal, political, and religious as well as commercial and economic.”


Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War by Robert Coram

This guy was incredible in three different ways. First, he was the best fighter pilot in the Air Force. He was nicknamed “40-second Boyd” because it never took him more than 40 seconds to defeat someone in the air. Second, he was a remarkable thinker.  He created a formula (E-M theory) that was the basis for designing new planes (the F-15 and F-16 being the two main ones) and for evaluating the performance of any fighter plane in the air. He also revolutionized military tactics, both in the air and on the ground.  Some refer to him as the most important military strategist since Sun Tzu.  His ideas were put to use by the Marines in the Gulf War and resulted in a lopsided victory for the United States. Third, he was a fighter.  He didn’t give a crap about money or rank. He told his acolytes that in life you could be somebody, or you could do something. Doers don’t rise in the ranks or get the accolades, but they make a difference in the world. Boyd was a doer.

Here is a great passage about Boyd, the civil rights activist:

One day in 1957 a new instructor came to the FWS: First Lieutenant Oscar T. Brooks. He was black. The next Friday rolled around and by midmorning Boyd’s staff was preparing to leave for the drive down Las Vegas Boulevard to the Sahara. Spradling pulled Boyd aside, nodded toward Lieutenant Brooks, who was standing across the room, and said, “John, is this a good idea?” “Is what a good idea?” “Taking Oscar to the Sahara. They will throw us out if Oscar goes. He’s going to be embarrassed.” Boyd turned to Spradling and his voice was low and urgent and intense. “Sprad, goddammit, he’s going. We’re going down there as a group and if they kick us out they’ll have to kick out the whole base. They’ll have to kick out the fucking U.S. Air Force.”

Reading List - April 2014

Every month, I am going to suggest 3-5 of the best books that I've ever read. To get the suggestions each month, sign up here. Here are the suggestions for April, 2014:

Inside the Investor's Brain: The Power of Mind Over Money (Wiley Trading) by Richard L. Peterson

This is, by far, the best collection of information on behavioral finance that I have read. Peterson has collected the most interesting examples of how and why we fail as investors, and suggests ways to avoid making dumb mistakes in the future.  You’ll learn about evolution, the brain chemistry behind our investing decisions, and the countless traps laid by the market to ruin our performance. My copy is so worn out (from reading, highlighting, and note-taking) that I’ll need to order another one soon.

Drunk Tank Pink: And Other Unexpected Forces that Shape How We Think, Feel, and Behave by Adam Alter

The title refers to a remarkable phenomenon: if you expose men to the color pink for prolonged periods, they get weaker, calmer, and generally more sedated. When the effect was first discovered, the color “drunk tank pink” became a popular tool. Holding cells, for example, were painted pink to calm prisoners. This book is chock full of interesting and useful examples of subconscious behavioral triggers, including several specific to the stock market. You’ll learn how more pronounceable ticker symbols (e.g. OPEN, HOG) result in better IPO performance, and how seeing a yin-yang symbol can affect our investing decisions.

Adapt: Why Success Always Starts with Failure by Tim Harford

“The art of success is to fail productively”

Using excellent examples, Tim Harford explains that to make progress, you must fail often and fail productively. You will finish this book ready to face failure, and excited to experiment in life and business: trying new approaches until you stumble upon something great.

The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survivalby John Vaillant

One of the most amazing books I’ve read in the last few years. The premise is simple: a hunt for a man-eating tiger in the remote taiga of eastern Russia circa 1997.  With this as a backdrop, the author (an amazing writer) explores the human condition, our relationship with nature and with animals. You will learn why the brand name “Viagra” comes from the Sanskrit word for ‘tiger.’

Within every major ecosystem nature has produced, she has evolved a singularly formidable predator to rule over it. In Primorye, the Amur tiger is the latest, most exquisitely lethal manifestation of this creative impulse…

 “The most terrifying and important test for a human being is to be in absolute isolation,” he explained. “A human being is a very social creature, and ninety percent of what he does is done only because other people are watching. Alone, with no witnesses, he starts to learn about himself—who is he really? Sometimes, this brings staggering discoveries. Because nobody’s watching, you can easily become an animal: it is not necessary to shave, or to wash, or to keep your winter quarters clean—you can live in shit and no one will see. You can shoot tigers, or choose not to shoot. You can run in fear and nobody will know. You have to have something—some force, which allows and helps you to survive without witnesses…Once you have passed the solitude test,” continued Solkin, “you have absolute confidence in yourself, and there is nothing that can break you afterward.”