Pages

Search This Blog

Sunday, December 30, 2018

2018 Year End Review

This lengthy and final post of 2018 consist of the following sections:
a)      A summary of my returns versus the indices
b)      A review of my investing strategy and what can be improved on
c)      Observation of the market
d)      A short summary of the “bad news” this year and my opinions on it.

Looking Back at the Numbers
Vanguard S&P 500 ETF
Start of Year: 247.09
Today: 227.76
Dividends: 8.062
Returns: (227.76+8.062)/247.09 = -4.56%

SPDR STI Index Fund
Start of Year: 3.48
Today: 3.1
Dividends: 0.113
Returns: (3.1+0.113)/3.48 = -7.67%

Tracker Fund of HK
Start of Year: 30.05
Today:  25.65
Dividends: 0.95
Total return: (25.65+0.95)/30.05 = -11.48%

Personal: 4.15%
Compared YOY, dividend payments increased slightly due to increased capital injection. Yield has increased slightly, but at this stage, dividend investing is not my main concern.
I glad to have 4.15%; it feels a tad disappointing to have lost a 20+% lead over the indices to 11%-15%. Looking forward, if I could seriously have a 10% lead over the indices, I probably make so much money that I wouldn’t care. But there is no way to tell. 

Investing Strategy
My approach is to look for easy deals, i.e. no brainers. A simple idea takes no more than a paragraph or two to describe.
***
A word about “easy.” What exactly is easy? Let me illustrate:
Imagine a hypothetical company that makes toilet brushes. Revenue and bottom line has been stalling or suffering slight dips for the past four years. Net margins has never dip below 30% for the last 9 years. Every year, its net operating cashflow has been over 100m, and capital expenditure has been only 3 to 5 million for the last ten years.
Insiders has been buying stock. But the market, in all its collective wisdom values it at 7.7 price to earnings (PE). Market capitalization stands at 1.14B.
Given that it has a cash hoard of over 271m and no debts, the company is actually selling for 869m.  That means the company is priced at less than 9 times free cash flow.
A casual market observer will point out that we are in volatile times. Tariffs are imposed between two of the world’s superpowers. Nobody is certain what would happen in the near future. But this company does not derive a sizeable revenue overseas.
The overseas opportunities for this company looks uncertain, but the risk in terms of valuation is low.
Would you be buying more stock if the market decides to slash its asking price by 20%? I certainly will!
***

The best companies to buy are companies with problems, but possessed a wonderful track record, with decent management and dividends to boot. 

The former boost your chances of recovery, the latter pays you for waiting. The lovely thing about problems is that usually companies will overcome it, and an investor might be able to assess the probability of that success with some experience. With problems come uncertainty and risk. I cannot account for uncertainty, but accounting for risk, as defined by difference in value versus market pricing, is my job.

Since market is usually efficient, good deals are usually scarce. I aim to avoid over diversification; having more than 8 or 9 stocks is a crowd. 

What I could improved on, was the amount of transactions made. Transaction cost is reduced from 0.65% to 0.55% this year, but the number of transactions is 59 vs 54 and 58 the previous two years. I hope to do better than this next year. The interesting figures are how many buys vs sells executed in each of those years.
Year
Buys
Sells
Market Returns*
2018
39
20
-7.14%
2017
31
23
21.11%
2016
44
14
5.03%
* SPDR Straits Times ETF (es3) figures from Stocks.Cafe.
In terms of absolute dollars, I was a net buyer in 2018 and 2016, and a net seller in 2017. On hindsight, maybe it is a good thing since the indices are returning negative this year, where one should be a buyer?

The other lacking effort on my part this year is the absence of quality special situations investing this year. The Religare Health Trust (RHT) sale to Fortis wasn’t very well researched, and even with the information I knew that time, the deal felt like a “50-50,” where the odds were simply not great. I was lucky to exit the position with small profits. TBH, I have never seen a deal with so many twist and turns like RHT. It takes a lot of courage to hold on.

A lack of discipline was also invested in other “50-50” deals which was subsequently sold at a small loss/profits. This is disappointing as the lack of discipline will only result in a huge losses in the long run. Lesson learnt—only initiate a position when I am willing to put in 10% or more of my net worth into it.


Observations about the market
The number of going-private deals declined since the start of this year. I believe that a rising number of going-private deals indicate a cheap market. I will be keenly reading the news on any trends of such. The dearth of IPOs is another murky indicator too, although the quality of IPOs coming to SGX is usually poor..

The idea of buying the dips was popular earlier this year… but all it took was December to vanquish it. Quick rebounds returns simply halted.
Just for the sake of entertainment, I reviewed the chart of 2018, Vanguard S&P 500 ETF, and counted the amount of dips and peaks in which an incredible trader could participate in.


An impossible 51% gain awaits any trader who, unrealistically I must add, is able to participate in every dips and recovery. Such a miraculous operation is quite impossible, since it requires god-like timing. The above trades did not include the deadly December correction.
What happens if this trader refuse to stop and carried on till December? 


He would have exited 33.9% richer have he sold on Christmas Eve, and 41.8% if sold just 3 trading days later. Huge difference.

Trading, such an exciting game.

These small, single-digit gains were no results of intelligence but out of bravado. How can such a method be reliably used? Nobody has an idea what tomorrow brings. The only endearing fact, which decades of financial academia has proved, is that equities will return more than bonds in the long run. The long run is 10-20 years and not 10-20 days periods that buying on the dip entails. 

The market is a tough, mean bastard and there must be a source which participants obtain their mental fortitude from.

Buying the Bad News
There were plenty this year. Some that I could recall:
  • Comfortdelgro “recovering” after the Grab/Uber deal and its decline after the arrival of Go-Jek
  • SingTel and its troubles in Indonesia and India
  • Kimly-Asian Story-Pokka deal which got the latter’s CEO suspended and Kimly directors’ passports impounded.
  • Lippo Group-Meikarta senior executives arrest and the subsequent sell-down of all its listed subsidiaries before and after the news
  • Litigation in Top Glove following an acquisition
  • Malaysia “Freak” Election results
  • The loss of a major customer for Serial Systems (almost a 50% sell down)
  • The Datapulse Tech fiasco
Personally, I love bad news. But I have my own opinions on this. 
I think one should avoid buying the “bad news” on two situations.
1)      When the integrity of the owner/managements is suspect. Who is responsible for producing the financial statements that we as investors rely on? There are hundred and one ways for management to profit, but only one way for small retail investors like us.

2)      Avoid companies who can’t compete with the low-cost competitor. Nobody could beat Nebraska Furniture Mall with a ferocious Mrs. B. As long as the low-cost competitor is profitable, this is going to be a long term problem. Likewise on a long-term basis, there can be no way a rationale consumer will choose something that cost more.

Graham has a point when big enterprises hit a bad patch, the odds of them overcoming it is good due to the resources (but human and capital) they have. However, I do feel that we had a huge bull run—most equities are priced on the high side. As such, these troubled, unpopular companies are unlikely to be priced at a bargain. There is no substitution for valuation.

Do not expect the market to be kind-- only wish that it will become sane in the long run. I wish everyone good health.

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Portfolio Commentary: December

SPDR STI Index Fund
Start of Year: 3.48
Today: 3.095 (excluding dividend of  0.113)
Returns: -7.816%

Tracker Fund of HK
Start of Year: 30.05
Today:  25.85 (excluding dividend of 0.16)
Returns: -13.44%

My Little Portfolio: 3.6%

Transactions made: Large increase in PC Partner, which I will make some notes of later.

Size of portfolio has lightly increased since Nov, but extremely volatility brought portfolio value much, much lower.

Just one week ago, the overall time-weighted returns is 11.57%. Almost 8% has been shed in a matter of a week, 5.71% in 4 days. PC Partner is the main reason for this heavy decline. In a matter of a week, the price of PC Partner plunged from 2.57 to 1.76. This is a fall of 32% in one week.

PC Partner started off the year of 2018 at 3.67 HKD. It went as high up as 7.55 HKD (that is a 100% increase). The decline pretty much started on 18-July-2018, at 7.08 HKD. That is a plunge of 75.4% in a space of 5 months.

I was speechless as the stock was sold down in no less than 5% daily. The most disconcerting of this issue is that insiders did not make any purchases, and neither were any company-related announcements made. There are a few bright spots in this company, but I am well aware of its less-than-perfect balance sheet, and largely cyclical earnings over its 8 year of listed financial records. A court hearing will commence in early Feb, and earnings visibility of its product, taking up a huge space in its inventory, will be much clearer then.

Time will only tell if I made a huge mistake as PC Partner isn't my typical stock.

Just today, some idiot decided to sell TTJ at a 10% discount, although only 4000 shares is involved. I lost count of the number of times a stock in my portfolio has lost 10% this week.

Maybe this is why value investing is so hard? I wish there is some known problem with the company, but there wasn't any.

Apr 2024 Portfolio Update (Hong Kong Recovery, Cordlife Teaser)

Don't ask me why there is a shoe missing. Maybe it reflects a missed opportunity on Anta Sports.. Topics Discussed: -Recovery of Hong Ko...