A recent discussion with a
friend triggered this post. While discussing some stock recos, one of the
questions he asked was regarding the price targets I expected for the stocks I
had recommended to him over next 2-3 years – Aditya Birla Nuvo, L&T and
CARE. If you read Warren Buffet’s quotes, you will realize that simple thinking
or a simple solution to a problem is often the best solution. And I for one, do
try to follow his philosophy, where possible and more importantly applicable.
Let’s just see the stocks I
have written about and see which of Buffet’s philosophies went into them:
Buying a stock is about more than just the price
"It's far better to buy
a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful
price."
For this reason alone, I
have avoided Page Industries and Eicher Motors. Given that they have good
businesses which have done well over the last few years, but they certainly
don’t quote at fair prices. I would rather go for Ashok Leyland or Tata Motors
which are much more reasonably priced than Eicher Motors. When u are at the top, the only way u can go is down.
The next few are some of my favorites.
The best time to buy a company is when it's in trouble.
"The best thing that happens to us is when a great company gets into temporary trouble...We want to buy them when they are at the operating table."
In the last 3-4 years
or so, a couple of my recommendations have been Wockhardt and MCX which fit this philosophy to the t. Both are
excellent businesses but ran into grave trouble, some of their own making and
some not. As I had written in my blog, there was nothing wrong in MCX’ business
then (Aug. ’13) and nothing is wrong now. But then, it quoted close to 300 and
today it is quoting close to 840. And the cause of
this trouble was not the business but the parent company which was in deep
trouble over irregularities in its subsidiary NSEL.
Same is the case with
Wockhardt. With a seasoned Khorakiwala at the helm, it made some wrong bets on foreign
currency derivatives way back in 2008. Saddled with a debt of over Rs. 3700
crore, Wockhardt had gone in for the corporate debt restructuring (CDR) process.
Following that, it defaulted on redemption of
$110 million (around Rs540 crore then) of bonds in October 2009. To add to its
troubles, a group of 3 FCCB holders filed the winding-up petition against
Wockhardt in January 2010 which was admitted by Bombay HC. The fact of the
matter was that Wockhardt was slammed from 2 sides – one was the INR
appreciation (Wockhardt’s business was heavily export-centric, accounting for
as much as 80% of its turnover) and the other was the inability to pay back the
FCCB amount. This led to a run on its share price which collapsed from above
1000 closer to 100 in no time.
The company made some
wise moves to get out of this trouble – it sacrificed a part of its hospital
business, the entire nutrition business and animal health business. With this,
some amount of sanity was restored. In
2009-10 Wockhardt’s debt equity ratio was at an alarming level of 5.5 which now
reduced to just 0.4. During this period,
the share price moved from less than 100 to close to 1500.
Once there was some
clarity on how it wanted to move forward, I boarded it at a reasonably good
price and made good money. Again, there was nothing fundamentally wrong with
its business; it made some wrong moves and more importantly put together plans in place
to get out of the mess it found itself in. I still hold it from around 700
levels and expect that it will move much higher from here onwards, though it has appreciated by
close to 50% in the last 2 years or so. Of
course there may be bouts of ups and downs but then it can’t be a 1-way
street can it? I am sure that the able Mr, Khorakiwala would have learnt his
lessons and is putting in place a structure to prevent such mishaps,
leading the company to more assured and stable growth.
Stocks have always come out of crises.
"Over
the long term, the stock market news will be good.”
In
the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic
and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and
financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a
disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497."
The one company which fits
the bill above is JSPL.
If you see the price
action in the recent times, it seems clear that people have accepted that the
damage has been done to the extent that any improvement on the coal auction
side would help them come back which is one of the reasons they lost this
entire ground. Also the penalty issue which is still hanging fire could start
abating if they were to get some sort of a respite which is likely.
At the same time the ordinance
for the mining side could improve even the steel business for them. So all in
all, they can come back from this much stronger, much like Wockhardt. If you
are patient enough with this, returns could be manifold.
Take
the next 2 together.
Think long-term
“If you aren't
willing to own a stock for ten years, don't even think about owning it for ten
minutes.”
Forever is a good holding period
"When
we own portions of outstanding businesses with outstanding managements, our
favorite holding period is forever."
As I have written in my
blog, when you invest In equity u should have a minimum holding period of 3-5
years, the longer the better. If u catch a good company, the returns over a
longer time-frame can easily be 20% compounded annually. And very few
instruments will give u that kind of return in India, now or in the future.
For e.g. take Aditya Birla
Nuvo (ABN) which I wrote about in Nov. last year. With a young KM Birla at the
helm (he is less than 50, so unless something untoward happens, has a long way
to go; and he has running the Birla group splendidly for the last 19 years from
the age of 28), ABN can also flourish from hereon. Once it starts hiving off
its subsidiaries into separate companies, real value-unlocking will happen
Same with L&T the only
diff. being there is no defined promoter family behind L&T, but there is a
professional board which will ensure its wellbeing.
I started buying ABN from ’05 when it was
called Indian Rayon and was around 350. Since then, I have bought it at various
levels over the years, even at levels of 1000 thus getting an average price of
around 700. And I have no intention of selling it off anytime soon, unless I
need the money.
Same with L&T – started in ’99 when it was
around 200 and kept adding at various levels. Since then, it has given 3 bonus
issues, 2 of them 1:1. Can you ask for more?
CARE is a new entrant
since it came with an IPO only in 2012 @750. Now it is around 1600. But
compared to its peers, it is still not expensive. I have already written about
it earlier. This is the only stock among the listed rating peers which as yet
hasn’t been grabbed by any rating MNC (CRISIL has S&P, ICRA has Moody’s,
and now IDBI wants to get out of CARE to monetize its holding, giving any other
MNC exactly the entry it may be looking for). And mind u, being a niche stock,
it will never be cheap on the valuation front (not the price). But if u stick
to it, returns are likely to be secure and manifold.
The second Buffetism - The best time to buy a company is when it's in trouble, fits Sun TV like a T.
ReplyDeleteApart from the fact that the govt. had threatened to stop its channels over its promoters background/arrest, there was nothing operationally wrong with it. And people from South can vouch how many people stopped seeing its channels post this govt. decision. Of course, Sun TV duly challenged it in court, and appears to have a good chance of winning it too. This is due to the fact that within the govt. itself, there is no unanimity over the decision. While MHA wants to block it, I&B doesn't. Even the AG appears to be on the side of the I&B ministry giving Sun a much needed boost. And how Sun has risen. People who had bought Sun TV at around 280 when the crisis was at its peak, would be laughing their way to the bank with gains of 25% in close to a month. No mean feat indeed in the current market !
And I think Sun TV is far from done. If the case is finally settled in its favor, it would be difficult to get hold of. With a near monopoly in the South Indian drawing rooms, it would not be long before it regained its lost glory.
In the worst case scenario, if the govt. indeed has its way and bans Marans from operating it, they can always sell to an interested buyer (and there would be plenty of them - Indian and foreign) at a good price. If not, they can go about their business expansion as they have been doing. Either way, the people who would benefit would be the shareholders.