.@AnnieDuke has a new book out today, "Thinking in Bets," which is a great read for not only for investors but for all decision makers who operate in probabilistic domains. Well written, entertaining, and packed with useful concepts. https://t.co/Mg8U2OAdcI
— Michael Mauboussin (@mjmauboussin) February 6, 2018
Chris Davis on Charlie Munger. Thanks for the gift Chris! Excellent book "Worldly Wisdom" by Munger. pic.twitter.com/6TIPtmXMHt
— King of the mountain (@OriginalKOM) February 3, 2018
This article by John Heldman is excerpted from a recent issue of The Triad Perspective.
What do certain actors, movie producers, directors, television hosts, comedians, athletes, music conductors, journalists, musicians, politicians and CEOs have in common? Hint: they’re all men. Another hint: they’re part of a large and growing group. And yes, they’ve all been accused of or admitted to sexually inappropriate conduct.
We don’t normally drift off into sensitive subjects such as this, but as a red-blooded male who’s been around awhile, I gotta admit to being more than a little surprised by the blatant, wanton disregard for women shown by some of these predators.
I’m always amazed when successful people–and the people making recent headlines are successful, or they wouldn’t be in the headlines–do stupid things, taking large risks that seem completely out of proportion to whatever their immediate wants might be.
But it’s not that simple, I guess. These are smart guys–yes, it’s all guys–who would likely be able to size up the risks and rewards in other settings. And yet they make these ridiculous, careless, risky decisions. What is it that drives this behavior?
It seems in these cases that we have too much Ego and not enough Self-Restraint. A giant ego probably creates the feeling of invincibility. The predator must know the behavior is risky–and wrong–but brushes off his inner conscience: “I’ll never get caught.” Lack of self-restraint apparently grants the go ahead. Perhaps in some circles of society–entertainment, politics, sports, business–cultural norms have degraded to the point that the normal inhibitions just don’t matter. I hope not. Still, logic tells me none of this behavior makes any objective sense.
While I realize that this is a bit far afield for an investment-oriented article, smart people doing stupid things always grabs my attention. Especially when it’s large-scale and broad-based as in the current sexual misconduct allegations.
Risky behavior in these situations reminds me of risk-taking in the investment arena. Investors at times will take outsized risks for a rather modest expected return, rationalizing that the risks are so small as to make the bet prudent. The trouble is while the risks are perceived to be low or negligible, the consequences of a bad outcome can be severe. Just ask Harvey Weinstein.
We try to check our ego and resist the impulse to always assume we’re right, or have all the answers. Investing is a game of probabilities since we’re dealing with the future and its unknowns.
There’s an old saying in the investment business: “don’t pick up nickels in front of a steamroller“, or don’t take large risks for small gains. A couple of free nickels might be nice, but once the steamroller hits, it’s game over. When I see the careers and reputations of these men ruined by their conduct, this phrase resonates well with me. It should for you as well.
Past performance does not guarantee future results. Results are presented net of fees and include the reinvestment of all income. The opinions expressed herein are those of Triad Investment Management, LLC and are subject to change without notice. Consider the investment objectives, risks and expenses before investing. The information in this presentation should not be considered as a recommendation to buy or sell any particular security and should not be considered as investment advice of any kind. You should not assume that any securities discussed in this report are or will be profitable, or that recommendations we make in the future will be profitable or equal the performance of any securities discussed in this presentation. The report is based on data obtained from sources believed to be reliable but is not guaranteed as being accurate and does not purport to be a complete summary of the available data. Recommendations for the past twelve months are available upon request. In addition to clients, partners and employees or their family members may have a position in any securities mentioned herein. Triad Investment Management, LLC is a SEC-registered investment adviser. More information about us is included in our SEC Form ADV Part 2, which is available upon request.
I am pleased to share with you highlights of Best Ideas 2018, the fully online conference hosted by MOI Global last month. Best Ideas 2018 was our largest online conference ever, with more than one hundred instructors from the MOI Global community presenting their favorite investment ideas.
Inside this issue, we include selected thesis summaries as well as a collection of insights shared by the instructors. Additional instructor insights are available at moiglobal.com.
We had the distinct pleasure of recording a special kind of Best Ideas 2018 session with Mohnish Pabrai, managing partner of Pabrai Funds and CEO of Dhandho Funds. We are grateful to have Mohnish as an active member of — and mentor to — the MOI Global community. Shai Dardashti and Mohnish spoke about philanthropy, Dakshana Foundation, having lunch with Warren Buffett, and more.
In the next edition of The Manual of Ideas, we will share edited and condensed transcripts of selected sessions, making it easier to delve deeper into some of the most compelling ideas. In the meantime, I hope you’ll enjoy replays of all sessions on the MOI Global website. Slide presentations are also available for download.
A few words on the kind of community we are trying to build:
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“There is in man, particularly one in an advanced culture, a natural love of accurate cognition and a joy in its exercise. This accounts for the widespread popularity of crossword puzzles, other puzzles, and bridge and chess columns, as well as all games requiring mental skill. This tendency has an obvious implication. It makes man especially prone to learn well when a would-be teacher gives correct reasons for what is being taught, instead of simply laying out the desired belief ex cathedra with no reasons given. Few practices, therefore, are wiser than not only thinking through reasons before giving orders but also communicating these reasons to the recipient of the order.” –Charlie Munger
This article is part of a multi-part series on human misjudgment by Phil Ordway, managing principal of Anabatic Investment Partners.
“In general, learning is most easily assimilated and used when people consistently hang their experiences on a latticework of theory and answering the question: Why? Indeed, the question “Why?” is a sort of Rosetta stone opening the major potentiality of mental life.”
“Unfortunately, Reason-Respecting Tendency is so strong that even a person’s giving of meaningless or incorrect reasons will increase compliance with his orders and requests. This has been demonstrated in psychology experiments wherein ‘compliance practitioners’ successfully jump to the head of lines in front of copying machines by explaining their reason: ‘I have to make some copies.’ This sort of unfortunate byproduct of Reason-Respecting Tendency is a conditioned reflex, based on a widespread appreciation of the importance of reasons. And, naturally, the practice of laying out various claptrap reasons is much used by commercial and cult “compliance practitioners” to help them get what they don’t deserve.
Anyone with children will surely recognize the parallel – despite the tendency to miss the many small changes that come at parents almost daily as they observe their children’s growth, it is truly stunning how quickly they learn. And the question “Why?” is often asked over and over and over again by children of a certain age. Only the shame of social proof seems to dissuade older adults from doing the same.
Guy Spier, Mohnish Pabrai, and Michael Shearn on Checklists
January 30, 2018 in Audio, Featured, Interviews, TranscriptsA trio of value investors came together at an online conference hosted by MOI Global in 2014 to delve into the topic of investment checklists. In a Q&A session that lasted more than an hour and explored various aspects of checklist-based investing, Mohnish Pabrai, Guy Spier, and Michael Shearn shared their wisdom and insights into this important topic.
The audio replay and full transcript are available to members of MOI Global.
The following transcript has been edited but may contain errors.
John Mihaljevic, MOI Global: We’ve got three exquisite minds with us to discuss the topic of investment checklists, something that’s crucial in scrutinizing investment ideas. We have Mohnish Pabrai, who needs no introduction. He runs the Pabrai Investment Funds, has done so for quite a few years with amazing success and follows a strategy that seeks out undervalued companies. He is known in the industry for having a process that involves having an investment checklist and so we look forward to his perspective. Also joining us is Guy Spier, my Zurich-based friend and successful value investor who runs Aquamarine Fund. We also have Michael Shearn, who founded Time Value of Money and is the author of the excellent book, The Investment Checklist.
I’ll open the floor by mentioning that Mohnish a few minutes ago held up his investment checklist, and while I politely requested to see the checklist, we’re going to hear excerpts and thoughts about the process of constructing a checklist. Mohnish, could you talk about how you realized that checklists were of such importance to your investment process?
Mohnish Pabrai: The topic of checklists is something I don’t need too much cajoling to talk about. It’s near and dear to my heart. To give you a little backdrop, the pioneer of the usage of checklists is the aviation industry. Aviation today is ultra-cheap and ultra-safe, and those two attributes are directly a result of the usage of checklists. The modus operandi I followed in trying to create an investing checklist was to look at the FAA [Federal Aviation Administration] and the way it deals with airline safety. I used that in building a checklist.
If you go back a little further, Boeing had produced this bomber, and they wanted a large contract at that time from the U.S. Air Force. They were a shoe-in to get the contract and they had arranged for all the military top brass to come see a demo flight. When this B38 took off, it promptly leaned on one side and then crashed with causalities. That was the end of Boeing getting that contract, and the company had invested a huge amount in that airplane. They went back and analyzed what had gone wrong. This was a very complex airplane, and they came to the initial conclusion it was too much plane for a person to fly. It was too complicated.
Then, Boeing drilled down into the problem and came up with the first aviation checklist. To assist the pilot they said, “Before takeoff, here are some things you can do. While you’re in flight, here are the next things you need to do for landing and so on.” They convinced the Air Force to give them another try and, of course, the plane flew flawlessly. Subsequently, they had virtually no crashes unrelated to being shot at during World War II, so that plane performed magnificently. It was called the Flying Fortress.
From then on, checklists became fundamental in aviation. The way the FAA goes about looking at airline safety and flight safety is, on a steady-state basis the FAA does nothing. They get going when there’s a plane crash anywhere in the world of any significance. When there is a plane crash, they send their experts, and the NTSB [National Transportation Safety Board] gets involved. The main thing they’re focused on is to find out exactly what caused the crash. They spend ungodly resources to get that answer.
They have a very pragmatic approach. The FAA has a certain price for a human life, and that goes up every year to account for inflation. Last time I checked a few years back it was about $3.5 million per person. If there’s a plane crash, for example that “crash” landing on the Hudson where those flying geese hit that flight. They’re able to model what the probabilities of something like that happening are and, in fact, in the early 1960s, there was another airplane that crashed. That plane was hit by a bird or a few birds in one engine and then shrapnel flew out from that engine and destroyed the second engine, even the fuselage. It caused damage in the fuselage. That plane crashed and no one survived.
When that crash took place, the FAA studied the problem and mandated a number of changes in the way aircraft engines were manufactured in the future. They required an aircraft engine to not throw out any parts when it ingested a bird. It could fail, but it would fail in a manner that would not threaten the airplane. Birds hitting airplanes is a common occurrence. We never hear about it because there isn’t a crash, because there’s still at least one functioning engine. The Hudson crash was not just birds, but Canadian geese hitting the airplane. They looked at it, took a pragmatic approach, and tried to figure out the probabilities. My guess is they might put more rules around how airports control birds around airfields.
The approach the FAA takes, which is you send in people to examine a crash and then figure it out, is exactly the way I built the investment checklist. The equivalent of an investment crash is when you have a permanent loss of capital, so I said, “Why don’t we try to find a whole bunch of value investors who had these permanent losses of capital? Then once we see a permanent loss of capital, ask ourselves the question, ‘Was it obvious before the investment was made that there was likely to be a problem with the investment, something that was visible before the investment was made?’” Looking at the B38 model, which is investing a multi-variable-type activity, which a lot of different factors going into the dynamics for the future of business and one can easily get swayed by the upsides while ignoring some of the red flags and so we are building a list of red flags to look out for.
I looked at Warren Buffett’s mistakes, Charlie Munger’s mistakes, Longleaf Partners, Third Avenue, Seth Klarman, David Einhorn, and so on. I had an intern help me build a checklist and what we found is that in almost all cases, it was very obvious before the investment was made what was a very significant blind spot the investors, some great minds, didn’t think about. As we saw these mistakes, like for example, the easiest ones are Buffett and Munger because they talk about most of their mistakes, so things like Dexter Shoes, Berkshire Mills, U.S. Air, NetJets and these types of business, diversified retailing and so on, we were able to start to put together some questions about what had caused the failure and then we went to other investors. I also look at my own mistakes, obviously, because I had a full dataset. With some investors, they don’t talk much about their mistakes, so there was an exercise of trying to reverse engineer and sometimes we could and sometimes we couldn’t. If we couldn’t reverse engineer it, we just left it alone, but the ones that we could, we did.
I went about basically just building a list of questions. For example, when we saw the failure of Dexter Shoes, the question that came up was is this a business that can be negatively affected by cheap, foreign competition or cheap labor with these locales. Sometimes we had issues with businesses with unions. With something like US Air, the airlines have multiple issues because you’ve got a duopoly of suppliers, you’ve got a duopoly of engine manufacturers, you’ve got unions and then you’ve got pricing set by your dumbest competitor trying to cover marginal costs, so a number of different checklist questions that come out of that sort of a business. We just went around one-by-one and looked at the list and just started building the list. Eventually, the checklist now has about 97 questions on it and what I found so remarkable was that they fell into some very nice categories.
For example, I have the checklist here with me and this is the one I ran before we made the investment in Chesapeake Energy. It goes on for a few pages, but that’s because we’ve got all the mistakes below every question, but there’s a very neat section. The first section is on leverage and leverage doesn’t have a lot of questions, but it has the maximum number of failures, so all kinds of different issues with lots and lots of great minds missing things related to leverage. Another area is management and ownership and that has a number of different questions. Things like it has a senior team and the CEO has been together for a while, will the death or departure of the CEO have a significant impact, that sort of thing and then the next one we get to is on moats and basically comparative advantage, so state of competitive advantage. Then we get to business valuation as another area and finally, there’s a catchall, which is a small group, which is personal biases. We made all these lists of questions and then reorganized it by subject, so they basically fell into five broad categories.
Checklists, just like in aviation, we have such a low rate of air crashes and fatalities in crashes and checklists are, to a large part, responsible for that. They are a tool that carries a lot of weight without adding a lot of burden. For example, typically when I run the checklist the first time when I’m looking at an investment – it’s the last thing I do before making an investment – it usually takes no more than 15-20 minutes, maybe 30 minutes max to run it, but the first time I run it, it pops up all sorts of questions to which I don’t know the answer. That’s like been the biggest value addition, which is there are these blind spots that I have completely ignored. Then I go back and research the business some more to get answers to those questions and sometimes that can take a week or longer. Then I rerun a second time. Now the second time when I rerun it, we’ve got all the questions answered and we can see the failure or possible failure points.
There are no businesses that will get a clean bill of health on all 97 questions, that’s not going to happen on pretty much any business, but it demonstrates very clear what are the issues that could possibly cause a problem and it forces you to think about it and to try and weigh in your mind what the odds and probabilities are of those sorts of events coming to pass. Then you can make a very sensible go/no-go decision, so I’ve been using the checklists for about four years, I would say close to five years and it’s been a lifesaver in the sense that the error rate – it’s a short time to draw conclusions – the error rate at Pabrai Funds over the last five years is almost nonexistent. There have been only two situations where we’ve had a permanent loss of capital. The total amount of capital we lost in those two situations was $5.5 million out of more than $500 million, $600 million in investments, somewhere along that number, so less than 1% ratio of loss. I’m sure the loss ratio will go up in the future, but that’s a muted number.
Out of the $5.5 million, $5 million was a loss on one investment, which was based in Egypt and we lost money there because there was a revolution. There were very extreme stresses placed on this particular business, so knowing what I know even today, I would have still made that investment because that was an outlier factor. The checklist has been remarkable. I’ve very thrilled with the fact that I was able to add this to our arsenal and it’s a significant advantage for investors.
MOI Global: Guy, do you use a checklist after you’ve already done significant research, and then use the checklist as a tool to verify that nothing is missed, or do you use a checklist as a skeleton that guides you through the entire research process?
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Guy Spier on Investing in Europe and Beyond
January 30, 2018 in Audio, Featured, Interviews, TranscriptsIn the fall of 2017, John Mihaljevic sat down with Guy Spier, chief executive officer of Aquamarine Capital, at the Aquamarine offices in Zurich for a wide-ranging conversation on value investing in Europe and beyond.
The audio replay and full transcript are available to members of MOI Global.
Enjoy our past conversations with Guy: 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 (I), 2015 (II)
The following transcript has been edited but may contain errors.
John Mihaljevic, MOI Global: Guy, it’s always a pleasure to be with you here at the Aquamarine offices in Zurich. I look forward to getting your wisdom and insights into the investment landscape, specifically in Europe. The markets have been going on for quite some time. Are you still finding bargains?
Guy Spier, Aquamarine Capital Management: John, thank you for having me. The audience should know that even though I live in Zurich and John lives in Zurich, we haven’t seen each other I think since The Zurich Project several months ago. So, I haven’t seen you for a long time. It’s great to see you.
You know it’s always very flattering when you say that I have wisdom because I don’t feel like I have any; I’m just in the business of acquiring wisdom. I just came back from about a two-week period where I was doing three annual partnership meetings in Zurich, London, and New York. I can remember the things that I said at the partnership meetings.
I don’t look just in Europe. I’m looking around the world. What I said at the partnership meetings is that I really feel like it’s never been more difficult for investors. The new technologies that are ripping through the world are having a huge impact on old businesses. The new technologies, to the extent that they’re public, have nosebleed valuations and we have an environment over and above that where enormous amounts of money are going into ETFs and indices. It’s not an easy or happy environment.
In spite of all that, in spite of not thinking that the portfolio was particularly cheap, I still prefer to be fully invested because in the event that we get inflation, we don’t know what would happen faster – stock prices going up, which is what they do in inflation, or stock prices going down because interest rates have gone up.
In Europe it turns out and I never would have expected this so the amazing thing is that I going into this had basically I would argue two kinds of stocks in my portfolio. The vast majority of them or a significant number of them were inflation-protected stocks so basically in and around financial services. I was happy to be there because I wanted to be protected from inflation which hasn’t shown up and you know in Japan inflation hasn’t shown up for twenty thirty years, so we don’t fully understand the central bankers don’t fully understand central banks owning vast proportions of the public debt which is basically sort of self-dealing by the government.
There are two European companies in the portfolio that have performed extraordinarily well. One is Fiat Chrysler and the other is Ferrari. While I knew it was extraordinarily cheap, it caused me a lot of discomfort. I’m different than Warren Buffett, Mohnish Pabrai, and various other great investors—when I find something I know is a good buy, I still throw up every time I issue the buy order. There was a certain amount of discomfort owning Fiat. It’s one of the stocks I would have conceded was not inflation-protected, and it’s worked out even faster than I expected it to work out.
Europe is the site of some extraordinarily good businesses, Ferrari being one of them. If I had gone to people three years ago and said, “Ferrari is not an automobile stock, it’s a luxury brand”, people would not have agreed. Ferrari and Maserati had a cloud over them because Fiat was a hated European automobile stock. Suddenly, people perceived Ferrari differently and “re-rated” it from an automobile company to a luxury brand. It’s hard for us in Europe and North America to understand [because to us] Ferrari is an automobile brand. But it turns out the rest of the world is developing, and they want stuff like that. Suddenly, the demand for Ferrari cars from places like China, in spite of luxury taxes, is through the roof. New rich people are being minted on a daily basis, and some of them want a Ferrari. What Europe has, the rest of the world wants, whether it’s Hermes scarves, Patek Philippe watches, or Ferrari automobiles.
If you look at Fiat, a similar phenomenon is becoming apparent to the analysts. It was fun to invest in Fiat when I was investing at roughly 5% of sales. Fiat was an also-ran European company fighting with the likes of Volkswagen, Mercedes, and BMW. Nobody really thought of Fiat as much of a company, but then they went and bought Chrysler. Everybody knew Chrysler had gone bankrupt, but nobody understood some of the powerhouse brands in there. Great Wall Auto was very interested in buying Jeep — they make Jeep knockoffs right now, but it’s not the real thing. Jeep has been converted into a blockbuster brand. People needed to dig below the surface to realize that Fiat Chrysler had these blockbuster brands in there. Another one that’s doing extraordinarily well is Maserati, which has all this European cache, and people around the world want it.
Fiat and Ferrari are two European stocks I’m pleased I own in the portfolio. I continue to look at smaller caps. While many of the “uber-compounders” have come out of the U.S., not all of them will come out of the U.S., and Europe has a very fair shot.
The environment in Europe and North America is difficult because most things are very highly valued. I discovered at the Pabrai Funds meeting that a very small proportion of Mohnish’s portfolio is now in the U.S. He has a tremendous advantage over many of us, as he has been spending a lot of time in India. I have accompanied him on one of those India trips, but I don’t have a license to invest in India, and I don’t have the same in-depth cultural knowledge of India to make the kinds of calls he’s likely able to make. So that’s a tremendous advantage for Mohnish.
MOI Global: You invested in Fiat when it was extremely cheap, so part of it has been other investors catching onto that. How much has it also been the management, which was part of your thesis, continuing to execute and create value intrinsically at a pace you’re happy with?
Spier: There are two extraordinary personalities at the head of Fiat, which makes it special. I have to credit Mohnish — I did a lot of the work alongside him, but it’s Mohnish who had the original insight. People see an also-ran European brand and compare it with Volkswagen, which is part-owned by a German Bundesland [state government] and has a very corporate management.
When you look at the people who run Fiat, chairman John Elkann is a significant family holder and represents the Agnelli family, which is about as close as you would get to royalty in Italy. This is a different kind of royalty as compared to British royalty, for example, because they are industrialists. John Elkann is ten years younger than I am and was carefully selected by his dad. He runs Exor and is an extremely thoughtful guy — you can read his letters.
Sergio Marchione was the perfect guy to run Fiat. He grew up as an Italian in Windsor, Canada, where much of the automobile production takes place — and even some Fiat plants. He has a broad range of industrial and financial experience and was behind the turnaround of a Swiss company called Societe Generale de Cerveyonce, based in Geneva. He was also a director of UBS. I met another guy who was also a director of UBS, who had some interesting things to say about Sergio and the differences between running an industrial company and a bank. Sergio as an industrial manager is extraordinarily capable.
The stock was deeply undervalued, and people hated it. I remember only three years ago on a conference call the auto analyst from Sanford Bernstein giving Sergio Marchione total grief. It was fun to give him grief, but the pace with which he went into Fiat, saw what needed to be changed, and focused resources on what was going to work. The old management of Fiat had this idea of Fiat as an Italian company. Think of Land Rover, a British brand owned by an Indian company. Fiat is no longer an Italian company. It is actually headquartered in Amsterdam and the main corporate office is in London. [Sergio] was able to see that this was an Italian brand that owned some American and other brands, and then to reallocate resources — “Do we need to be producing these brands in Italy, or can we produce them in Brazil or the U.S.? And, actually, which of our portfolio brands is going to take the company forward? The Fiat brand on an auto may not be so powerful. The Jeep brand on an auto? Very powerful. Alfa Romeo? Very powerful.”
The ability to see the brand portfolio differently and then to put the right resources behind it — that’s capital allocation. It’s pretty hairy capital allocation because you’re making some big bets. Sergio Marchione made sure on the conference calls that we knew that every now and then one of those big bets, e.g., a $1 billion new automobile platform, might not work out. So far, they seem to have worked extraordinarily well.
How many automobile companies are still run by a family who were able to put in a very smart CEO? I guess Ford still has some family management in there, but it’s not the same kind of dynamic management willing to make big, gutsy moves. So, Fiat was undervalued, with great capital allocators. In a market environment that was pretty fully valued, this was sitting right in front of everybody. I’m pleased with how fast and how well it’s worked out.
MOI Global: Both Fiat and Exor are publicly traded. Do you ever look at which of those two might be the better long-term investment? Do you ever consider Exor instead of Fiat.
Spier: Exor is a really interesting company. I’m going to be attending their annual meeting, and I’m looking forward to going. John Elkann writes in their annual report that they see themselves as builders of businesses. Not so long ago they divested their stake in C.B. Richard Ellis, the real estate company, and they bought control of an insurance company called Partner Re.
I understood the cheapness of Fiat Chrysler, so I wanted to be fully exposed to Fiat Chrysler. When you go to the “mothership” you expose yourself partly to Fiat Chrysler and partly to a few other businesses. One may or may not like those businesses and the valuations at which Exor bought into them. I can’t say I understand the mothership as well as I felt I did Fiat Chrysler. However, Exor and John Elkann are certainly a group of people to watch. I would put Exor up there with companies like Berkshire Hathaway and Markel Corporation, where you can invest your money alongside an owner family and leave it there for a very long time.
MOI Global: Looking at the auto business itself, there are lot of concerns around technological advances and what they might do to established companies. How do you assess those risks?
Spier: Charlie Munger has said that the moats, even of some businesses described as “inevitables” by Warren Buffett, have narrowed a bit. Charlie said he’s pretty sure American Express will be around and will have an excellent business in twenty years, but he is less sure of it now than he was, because of all the dynamic changes happening.
That’s true of the automobile business. I don’t think I could honestly say that I had squared off all those risks and had put them away so they were nonexistent. The risks of electrification and self-driving cars are out there, but some risk of technological change is out there for so many other investment ideas as well. Here’s what I could tell: The world is super-excited about electrification, autonomous driving, and car-sharing or “Uber-fication”. While the world certainly should be excited, we know what happens when the world gets excited: Things get “thrown out with the bathwater”. So we know the crowd is over there. How likely is it that things are going to be as bad as they are expected to be for the Fiat Chryslers of the world?
My wife has a new car with some self-driving features, but all of the evidence is that self-driving is far away, at least at least a decade or, I would argue, two decades. It’s exciting to think about a self-driving world, but on a moral level — I’m not saying this is right but an observation of the truth — the public is willing to allow humans to kill other humans on the road on the order of 40,000-50,000 people killed on U.S. roads every year, but they’re not willing to have computers do it. Somehow if one human kills another human, that’s acceptable, but if a computer does it, it’s unacceptable. To come to people and say, “self-driving cars are killing 30,000 people” is not going to be acceptable. We are not going to accept the same error rate, and street driving is extraordinarily complex.
I know I’ve regularly underestimated the rate of technological change. The people who are bold say, “You think it’s ten years away, but ten years becomes three years, and so on.” Sergio Marchione’s point is that Fiat can buy in the technology as well as anybody else. So, when the technology is there, and it’s proven and works, Fiat will be buying it in. It will be just like installing a different battery or a different seat system in the car, so it won’t affect the automobile business.
Similarly with electrification. We are still in that first part of the curve, where we overestimate the impact of the technology. Things like Tesla soar, and at some point we become disillusioned with the rate of technological adoption.
Did you know there’s an electrified Formula One series? That technology is being tested out in Formula One; they’re figuring it out. There are also many electric cars coming onto the market.
We all love Uber, but how many of us are giving up our car in our hometown? Cars are so much more than just a means of transportation. [I don’t agree with] this argument that the car is being commoditized and the iPhone is what gives us our identity. Cars are not just an expression of our identity; they’re also our personal space. Many people, when they have their commute in the morning, want to be inside a personal space; they don’t want to be in a space they’re sharing with somebody else.
The impact of technological innovation on the economics is further off than people think. Most importantly from the standpoint of the MOI Global community, it’s pretty clear that people are impressed with the new technologies they think are around the corner. That’s where the exuberance is. Old-line car companies that are not at the forefront of technology are considered to be in the backwaters. If you know that people’s attention is over there, then where it isn’t may be where the opportunity is. That was the case with Fiat Chrysler.
MOI Global: Switching gears toward the financial stability of the system in Europe… Even though the markets in general are quite highly valued, some large banks are not highly valued. What are your thoughts on their capital position and the future for equity holders?
Spier: I have not looked at European banks recently, so I can’t comment too strongly, other than to say that Basel III, local regulations, and the requirement for banks to increase capital were massively pro-cyclical. In the exact period in which you wanted banks to be extending credit, they were all pulling their haunches, because they were being regulated by local banking authorities, through Basel III requirements, and the credit rating agencies. So, I have not looked at individual banks in Europe – it’s harder for me to understand that environment.
Forgive the political commentary, but an interesting development from Brexit is that the “Brexiteers” in the U.K. thought that Britain voting to leave the EU would weaken the European system. I actually think that it strengthened it. Countries like France and Germany as well as other countries in Europe have seen the fickle desire of the British to leave the EU, and they are more committed now than ever to European institutions and to making them work. Even guys like the former Greek finance minister, Varoufakis, even though he’s so happy to get on TV and talk about the “thugs” in Brussels, there’s never any question in his mind that Greece should be a part of the EU.
We’ll see a strengthening of commitment, both on a political and popular level, to the institutions that make Europe work. It’s likely that in the future we’ll see appropriate bailouts of banks if necessary. I have not followed up on specific banks and what their capitalization looks like, how cheap they are, and what they look like in a unified European financial market, which is what I expect will happen.
MOI Global: You mention Brexit. Does that make you more or less likely to consider UK equities?
Spier: Unfortunately, I have not found anything I particularly like in the UK. I have looked from time to time.
Give the British economy twenty or thirty years to adjust and the UK will do absolutely fine, if they actually go through with Brexit. But those thirty years “ain’t gonna be pretty”, and we don’t even know what the environment will be like. It’s inevitable Britain will do well, but they may be delayed by thirty years. It will be like Britain’s National Rail – you eventually get into London, but you may spend some significant time waiting on the railway yards before you get there.
The picture is murky, but there will be some extraordinary globally active businesses in the UK. They are figuring it out right now. A company like Ryanair, which flies in and out of the UK, has pretty big uncertainty regarding how that new system will be regulated. They can retool for it, but I haven’t seen the valuations go down [enough] to get excited.
MOI Global: In terms of what does get you excited, are there business models or industries that you feel are particularly interesting?
Spier: We all understand the economics of bundling in cable TV, but [until recently] I didn’t understand the economics of bundling on the iPhone. The MOI Global community probably already understands this, but the simple idea is, the more useful apps you have on your iPhone, the more valuable the iPhone becomes. The more you can bundle into it, the better.
What’s a supermarket? It’s a bundling of stuff. Think about bundling on Amazon and all the stuff you can get in one space. Who would have thought that the time to move from one website to another is enough for the bundling effect on Amazon to be significant? You have the same checkout and your credit card stored there.
Bundling effects are huge, and network effects are huge. The businesses that have taken advantage of those effects have been important, such as Amazon and Facebook. There will be more industry verticals where it’s going to be a winner-take-all market in the way Uber has been.
Consider the dynamics of competition between Facebook and Snapchat. Facebook, through its ownership of Instagram and Whatsapp, is undermining Snapchat at every turn. Snapchat may not succeed in breaking through to build a niche and be a “winner take all”. Even Twitter may not be succeeding the way it ought to be. All new advertising revenue is divided between Google and Facebook.
There are other industry verticals where it’s different enough to get people’s attention and sell advertising to them, and those companies could be in Europe, they could be anywhere in the world.
With businesses I research, it comes down to whether I have confidence in the business model, the concept of bundling, economies of scale, and network effects. For every Amazon there are twenty companies that looked like Amazon twenty years ago. The enormous problem I have is you have to pay a very high valuation.
With an investment like Fiat, [we were] paying 5% of sales in terms of the market cap and maybe 12% in terms of enterprise value. Even for a cyclical automobile company, 50% of sales would be more reasonable; 5% or 10% is just an extraordinary number, and they’re making physical stuff. It was obviously cheap by the kinds of metrics we understand.
Then, we have this whole world in which companies trade at two-digit or higher multiples of any number you want to consider and at a multiple of revenue. The only way you can argue they are cheap is to look at a five- to ten-year horizon and say, “If this business grows the way I expect it to grow, it could multiply fivefold. Then, when we fast-forward three years, we will look back and see that it was cheap.”
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Guy Spier in Conversation with Mohnish Pabrai
January 30, 2018 in Building a Great Investment Firm, Full Video, Interviews, Transcripts, Video ExcerptIn 2014, MOI Global teamed up with Guy Spier and Mohnish Pabrai to produce a video of Guy visiting the offices of Pabrai Investment Funds in Irvine, California. Guy toured Mohnish’s office and then sat down for a fascinating conversation between the two value superinvestors.
Watch an excerpt of this MOI Global production:

Watch this MOI Global production in full:

The transcript has been lightly edited and may contain errors.
Mohnish Pabrai: I thought we might start with something that happened at a Warren Buffett lunch. My wife, Harina, mentioned to Warren I thought a business like Ikea would be a perfect company for Berkshire Hathaway to acquire, to which he immediately replied, “Yes, I wrote to them and told them to give me a call if they decided to do something.” Of course, then he explained the way Ikea was set up with the foundations and trusts, it was unlikely there would be any kind of transaction with Berkshire or anyone else.
Interestingly, I was recently re-reading Alice Schroeder’s book The Snowball, where she does an exceptional job with the depth and the writing style. One of the things she talks about is Buffett’s reading list. He reads American Banker and all these newspapers, but he also gets furniture publications to his office and skims those as well. Alice also mentions he’s very close to Irv and Ron Blumkin, the Nebraska Furniture Mart (NFM) grandchildren of Mrs. B [ed. note: “Mrs. B” was the popular nickname of NFM founder Rose Blumkin], frequently meeting them for dinner and even taking a trip with them once a year.
The net-net of all this is that he has spent an enormous amount of time studying the furniture business, and he’s talked to the Blumkins about what other companies would be good to acquire. Berkshire’s had a number of acquisitions in the furniture space, including Jordan’s and RC Willey. The issue is that investing is one of the broadest disciplines and the edge you can gain comes from a multidimensional way of looking at it. I came to look at Ikea as a fit because the nature of its business is so amazing, but Warren probably came at it more from the whole NFM experience, and the Blumkin brothers might have mentioned it directly to him.
The point is that someone like Warren Buffet had those unusual insights into the insurance business and then went into insurance in a big way. He had that insight into banks – Warren understands banks really well, and he used to own First Rockford. See’s Candy, for example, was a big learning opportunity for Warren, and this experience led to the Coke investment, among others. One thing that fascinates me with investing is that when you go through growth, reach the next level and find something which clicks, you had the same data set because all the data’s public, but it’s the analytics that becomes superior. It gives you insights that maybe others don’t have. We had some of that when we looked at the car business in the middle of 2012, and you had it when you looked at money center banks. To me, the interesting thing about investing is that one has to continue to not only scan the horizon but also go deep to find those rich veins.
Guy Spier: Do you think NFM was a successful acquisition? Warren knows the furniture business, and I believe if Berkshire owned Ikea, it might make up for all of these other furniture businesses, but my sense is that furniture businesses have not been a successful venture for Berkshire.
Pabrai: NFM has been a success and the reason is economics. Warren bought the business for about $60-$65 million and, at the time, the company had less than $100 million a year in sales. Today, NFM is more than ten times that size. Berkshire hasn’t plowed any capital in. In fact, it has probably pulled out a lot of capital over the years. NFM is an exceptional business, the reason being its cost structure. It’s a low-cost provider with low overheads, pulling in people from a several-hundred-mile radius, so the per square foot sales are probably 10x those of other Omaha competitors.
However, I agree with you about some of the others. Jordan’s, for example, hasn’t worked. That’s the other part of the investing business – you can have a pretty healthy error rate and do fine. What I’m trying to say is that in aggregate, furniture retailing doesn’t come across as an enormously lucrative thing to go into. I think it’s worked out fairly well for Berkshire. The same with jewelry – it has made a number of investments that may not have done so well, but Borsheim’s, a low-cost provider like NFM, did well for quite a while.
Spier: Helzberg Diamonds hasn’t done so great, but even if Warren doesn’t get to invest in Ikea, he did invest in Shaw Carpets, which is a duopoly. In a sense, he probably learned from furniture retail to be sure Shaw Carpet was the place in the value chain where it captured the most.
Pabrai: That’s the interesting thing. If you consider something like carpets, a normal investor might think of it and move on, saying, “Okay, carpets – blah.” When you drill down, though, you really start understanding. Take USG, which makes sheetrock. This drywall breaks and is easier to cut and crack than other drywalls, so contractors prefer it because of labor savings. Even something such as drywall can have a moat, and for me, the fascinating thing about the investing business is you don’t need too many. If you can find one of these insights, looking around the curve every couple of years or so, that’s quite a bit. In railroads, for example, Berkshire acquired Burlington Northern for $40-odd billion, and today, I don’t think it could be bought for $100 billion. It’s gushing cash and is the ultimate toll bridge because you’re not going to build another railroad like this, so with every passing day, it’s getting a deeper moat versus trucks.
Spier: In many of the interviews John does, there will be the question, “What is your process?” However, it seems to me those insights, those “aha” and “Eureka” moments, come when there isn’t any process. You’ve told me you have these “aha” moments. You don’t know when you’re going to get them, and you suddenly realize you’re on to something. It happened with the automobile business, but if someone were to ask you, “What exactly did you do? How did that happen,” I don’t think there’s any answer Mohnish can give. Every “aha” moment probably happens in a different way.
Pabrai: I have said this several times and will say it again – I’m a shameless cloner. Let me explain what I mean by that. When it comes to the process of getting insights, I think Warren and Charlie Munger are light years smarter than I’ll ever be, so I take a low-life shortcut, so to speak. I looked at and continue to look at what great investors are doing. For example, the automobile insight came from looking at the Manual of Ideas (MOI) and finding that GM was owned not only by Berkshire but was also the second-largest position of David Einhorn. I always hated the auto business for all the obvious reasons – unions, high CAPEX, consumer taste, etc. I hated American autos even more because of all the quality issues. My guess was that since Berkshire’s position was not that large, it would have been the decision of one of the two investment managers. Given GM’s distress, I thought it may have been Ted Wechsler because that’s more his bent.
The question I had was why would Ted Wechsler and David Einhorn, who can clearly see all the problems in the auto business, want to make this bet on autos. Why would someone like Einhorn want to make such a large bet? The funny thing is that Einhorn’s largest position at that time was Apple. Think about it: you have a big bet on Apple, and then your second bet is on General Motors. The two cannot be more different in terms of the nature of the business. For me, the starting point with autos was to simply try to answer the question, “Why would these smart guys want to do this?” I wanted to get an answer which made it clear to me, and as I drilled down to try to get it, it dawned on me it wasn’t stupid to be in autos. It was actually pretty smart because there had been a sea change, and that change was not fully appreciated or recognized by the market. Detroit had gone from being one of the worst to one of the best places on the planet to build a car. In fact, that US is now exporting lots of cars to other parts of the world because it’s so competitive in terms of its manufacturing.
That insight did not come from just looking at a 13F, but without the 13F, the seed of the insight wouldn’t have happened. For me, what has usually worked is something has given me a seed, and usually it will be looking at what the great investors are doing and then trying to understand why they’re doing it. Sometimes, it could come from a position in my own portfolio. For example, in December 2008, when commodity stocks were collapsing, I bought into zinc recycler Horsehead Holdings. I made the investment because it was a net-net. It was a classic Ben Graham-type stock, trading really cheap, below net current assets. As they say, you really learn about a business after you own it. I’d bought Horsehead because I was buying a basket of commodities and this looked super cheap, but as I subsequently drilled down more and more into the business and tried to learn more about it, I was fascinated and saw that even though it was in the commodity business, it had an incredible moat. I wouldn’t have been able to appreciate the finer points of the business if I hadn’t made the investment as a net-net.
I would say the key is there has to be a seed somewhere. In the 1970s, Warren Buffett took Adam Smith around Omaha, pointing out all these great businesses. About 15 years later, when he appeared on Adam Smith’s Money World program, he had bought most of them. The thing is, Warren had actually looked at his hometown and picked out the exceptional ones. That’s another way to do it, and I’ve thought about that – look around in Irvine, for example, identify the great businesses here and take it from there. For me, cloning the 13Fs has been a good seed. What are your thoughts on it?
Spier: When I find myself looking at something like General Motors or Horsehead, I have a rising sense of nausea. I’ll be looking at GM and thinking of the bankruptcy. I might even mention it to a friend and they’ll say, “Are you nuts? This thing just went bankrupt,” and my sense is it can have too much hair on it. You don’t have that rising sense of nausea. You actually have a rising sense of excitement even as all of this hair comes out. One would need to overcome a huge amount of resistance just to want to start reading the agreement between the unions and the automobile company to see what’s in it. I think you did. My reaction would be, “Oh my god, I’m going to read what’s in the union?” You don’t have this rising sense of nausea, do you?
Pabrai: Maybe this is wiring, but I do not find it exciting to look at Nestle or a Proctor & Gamble at 17 times earnings. I think it’s a negative since these great franchises can turn out to be bargains just because of the amazing returns and growth they can generate. In some cases, they can go from being national to international. When I look at globally established brands and they’re not under any kind of distress, the concern I have is how much money we can make off an investment and what insight I have that is so unique that 17 analysts following it for 17 years don’t have it.
You miss some. For example, I’ve been a loyal customer of Amazon and Costco for a long time. I’ve always thought Amazon was an incredible business. In fact, it is an interesting case to talk about because there’s a different way to analyze the business. Jeff Bezos is probably one of the all-time greatest business managers, an incredible visionary, leader, and CEO. If you compare Amazon to Wal-Mart, for example, Amazon has lines of business outside of retail, like web and hosting services. He dreams up new businesses for the company to go into. He’s probably capable of dreaming those up every three hours, and the areas it can go into are wide open.
Amazon has about $70-$80 billion in revenues today. It is probably within the realm of reasonable probabilities that five or ten years from now, it could a $400-$500 billion company. If it gets to something like $500 billion and puts 3%-4% of that to the bottom line, so 4% net margins, it would be a $15-$20 billion cash flow producer, one of the best on the planet. What is that worth? At $500 billion, it may not even be maxed out because it still operates in a small number of countries. The flipside is that it can also falter, so this is a difficult one. If things don’t hit me over the head with a 2×4, I tent to take a pass. With something like Amazon, the downside would dissuade me even though I can see the upside. I don’t see the margin of safety.
Spier: Regarding Nestle and P&G, for the longest time, I did not fully understand how the latent desire to say something pleasing to my investors influenced my desire to look at those companies. In the last two or three years, what really freed me was the blatant rule of “I’m not going to feel obligated and, in general, not talk about what I own. What I own is my concern.” The minute I did that, I was blown away by how many very smart people, people who have studied all the psychological and behavioral finance stuff, still failed to see it and understand that simply talking about your investments dirties up the thinking process. It has nothing to do with intelligence.
I think I’ve become better on the Nestle front, but there is a long way to go. An analogy with bridge might be appropriate: in bridge, it’s not the quality of your hand but what you bid and how you play that hand. You can have a really bad hand but play it well and do really well. It would be the same as buying into a horrible-looking business, but if you play it well, you can end up with very high returns.
Pabrai: I think the Holy Grail is to identify hidden moats. It’s not so much about cheap assets because if you found a 40-cent dollar and it gets valued at a dollar at some point, you’ve doubled your money in some period of time. But it’s a whole different thing if you’d found a Chipotle when it was in three states and sensed there were high probabilities this would appeal to a much wider group of people. One of the first investments Pabrai Funds made, back in 1999, was in a bank in the Bay Area called Silicon Valley Bank. It is an unusual bank with a definitive moat, different from other banks. I thought this one had some legs to do things, plus it had other peculiarities that made it interesting.
Spier: With the two for-profit education companies in Brazil, what was really great, even better than maybe a hidden moat, was a moat you could see being constructed. In the flooring business, Warren talks about how he’s excited even when his competitor acquires a business because it’s consolidating the market. What often happens is that people will talk a lot about what they believe is a hidden moat, and it becomes common knowledge. XYZ Company has a great moat nobody understands, it’s a high valuation and there’s a whole dynamic there. For me, those ideas can shout so loud that it’s hard to get away from them. Right now, we have Bitcoin. Not that it has a moat, but everybody wants to talk about Bitcoin, as not that long ago everybody wanted to talk about Netflix.
Pabrai: You’ve done well in identifying clearly visible moats and then hunting around the world for clones investors may not have appreciated. It’s like looking at Moody’s and saying, “What are the other credit rating agencies around the world?” because they all have the same dynamics in terms of the duopolies and pricing power. You did it with for-profit education in Brazil, right? You took for-profit education in the US and looked at it in other parts of the world.
Spier: Funny enough, for-profit education is now a better business outside the US, but there are many ways in which it doesn’t work. There are some wonderful brands in Africa, but the valuations are too high. Actually, I haven’t done this for maybe a year or two. Perhaps I should go and revisit it.
Pabrai: The same thing happened in India, where the subsidiaries of P&G and Unilever are publicly traded and have widely outperformed their parents. That would have been quite obvious because you would have seen the way Indians were going from unbranded to branded soap. The same thing with Indians not having bank accounts – it’s going to go to having bank accounts. Many of these things are obvious, and if one has some conviction, then they can proceed.
Spier: Speaking of India, do you think there’s any event which could derail its emerging growth?
Pabrai: India has already been derailed in terms of its growth for at least three or four years now. It was 9%-plus growth, and now it’s sub-5% growth. A lot of it has to do with government policy, and there’s a good chance the people in power will change in the next few months. If the new government chooses to focus on the economy, there is intense pent-up energy and ability to grow by some margin for a while.
Spier: My sense is that even though India is a dysfunctional place and has enormous difficulties, there’s nothing that will derail it in the way Egypt has been derailed by its political difficulties. Is there any chance of India going through what Egypt did?
Pabrai: The odds of the core principle of democracy going away is small, in my opinion. In fact, I think it’s the other way around. Even Egypt is on a path toward democracy although the path is not straight. Egypt is a different country and a better one, I think, than it was even five years ago.
Spier: In India, I’m less concerned about democracy, which I believe is pretty much embedded. I’m worried about communism and socialism and people feeling it’s the government that’s going to solve problems rather than the private sector.
Pabrai: I think we’re getting past that because they can see what happens when you take such an approach.
Spier: I know there’s a huge amount in your life that’s been created through destruction. I’ve seen a number of times how you had something in Dakshana that you decided was a no-go even though it had good prospects, and you tore it apart. [ed.note: The Dakshana Foundation is a philanthropic organization founded by Mohnish Pabrai and his wife. It provides gifted low-income students with academic coaching to prepare them for the entrance exam to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT)]. A number of times in your life, you’ve had a business with hundreds of employees, pulled it out by the roots, put it somewhere else and hit the reset button. Every time I’ve hit the reset button, it’s been incredible for me, and I’ve always felt like I did it too late.
Pabrai: It’s been surprising to me, but every time I’ve failed at something, it’s led to tremendous growth. In hindsight, those failures have been a blessing. What I’ve learned is that success doesn’t teach us much. We just feel good about ourselves and think we’re great when we succeed. I’ve found that failure has really been the driver of growth for me. I think I’m a much better investor today because of a whole bunch of different stumbles. Actually, I have always welcomed failure.
Spier: Let me tell you about a failure I noticed, something you were dealing with on the trip I took with you to Dakshana. You had an office in, I think, Gurgaon.
Pabrai: In Delhi, right.
Spier: You had staff, and I know you weren’t happy with that setup. Now you have the Colonel. Maybe you can tell me the story of how he keeps wanting to retire. You’ve told him he can have an office wherever he likes.
Pabrai: In 2009, when you were visiting Dakshana with me, things were at a pretty low point in terms of net worth and where markets were at. It was a great time for making investments, which was wonderful, but one issue I was facing then was a severe drop-off in my net worth and our ability to fund Dakshana. I knew I had to dramatically cut back Dakshana’s scope had and as I was looking at the changes to be made, it became clear to me that as we were to slim down, it was a great opportunity to improve Dakshana in a pretty dramatic way. That’s what we did. We had to hunker down, but in the process of doing so, we were able to sow the seeds of some great restructuring and growth.
At that time, one of my board members referred Colonel Sharma to me as a potential CEO, and it didn’t hurt that he was willing to work for one rupee a year. The Colonel is in his 70s and still pretty fit and very energetic, but every few weeks or months, he tells me he wants to go off to some mountain resort. I always tell him, “You retire, you die. There’s no point in thinking in those terms.” I’ve told him he can go to any mountain resort he wants, and we’ll put up an office five minutes from his house so he can show up for ten minutes or half an hour a day, whatever he wants, but to stay engaged. I think he would have a hard time himself pulling away from Dakshana because it draws you in.
Spier: It seems like you’ve found your Buffett manager there, and it’s fascinating that somebody with all the professional qualifications to run a not-for-profit in India would not be the right person. You’ve found somebody who’s working for Dakshana for free, and you don’t care how much time he spends on the project. If it’s five minutes a week, he’s still the guy you want running it.
Pabrai: The Colonel used to handle 40,000 troops, and he’s got a great team under him. He’s groomed and trained his people well, which is why he keeps telling me he wants to retire because he says, “They really don’t need me.” The team under him is absolutely jamming all the time, but I still feel Dakshana needs him. We don’t need a lot of time from the Colonel, but we do need him to be available from time to time and that, I would hope, continues endlessly.
It’s very clear to me the non-profit world has a myriad of problems, among the biggest ones being that the people who run non-profits are typically people with great hearts but not great business heads. What you need in order to have an effective non-profit is a benevolent entrepreneur running it. If people haven’t built businesses, they are missing some basic skills which I consider fundamental to running a great non-profit. Almost every non-profit is run by individuals who have never dealt with payroll.
At Dakshana, we had no interest in hiring people who had spent time in the non-profit world because I think having them unlearn what they thought was gospel would either be impossible or take a long time. It’s better for us to start with a clean slate, so we haven’t had people who come from the non-profit world. We also haven’t had people from the education world. We’ve found that having people from different industries and disciplines has been a source of great strength for Dakshana because they don’t know a certain way of doing things. We’re able to come up with ways of doing things that are probably quite novel and unusual.
Spier: What I see is your and the Colonel’s capacity to make tough decisions, decisions that would not by any stretch of the imagination appear to be benevolent because you’re aiming at a goal. You are there helping high intelligent young people get into the IIT, but the decisions you make for the people who don’t make it in are heartbreaking for me. It seems like both you and the Colonel are okay with that.
Pabrai: We’re not okay with it, but any non-profit has to realize that the problems of the world are immense while the resources at our disposal are very limited, so we have to think about maximizing the good we can do. Even if you are the Gates Foundation, you cannot solve all the problems of the world. Dakshana is not even a thousandth of the Gates Foundation in terms of assets or funding, so our mandate is simply to try to be good stewards of the resources at our disposal and do the most good we can with those. I’m very proud of what Dakshana has accomplished on that front because very few non-profits think that way.
Spier: I know the Charles T. Munger Hall is being built. When are we getting the Warren E. Buffett?
Pabrai: We’ll definitely get to that at some point. I’m working with the Indian government. The next one we’re going to build will be in Hyderabad. The Charles T. Munger Hall will be a 360-capacity coaching center in Bangalore. I would really like to name the one in Hyderabad the Prem Watsa Hall because Prem is from Hyderabad and has been an incredible supporter. It would be wonderful to have his name in that city, but we’ve got many more of these coming up. Warren’s name is definitely coming up.
Spier: Your Dakshana business card says “chief catalyst.” You haven’t called yourself chairman or CEO, and you’re obviously the mind behind it. Do you think you could have done as good a job if you had been in India? There are definitely disadvantages to being in Southern California with the beneficiaries being in India, but there may be some incredible advantages. The distance helps to get your thinking clear.
Pabrai: It would be worse, actually. I have lived all my adult life outside of India. I have been in the United States more than 31 years. People may not fully appreciate it, but when I go to India for Dakshana, I’m basically a tourist. I think I have spent less than half an hour in our headquarters in Pune during all these trips. In fact, most of the times when I go to India, I never make it to Pune because I love meeting the kids in the schools or meeting the parents in their homes. You can say that my Dakshana-related trips to India are not directly operational. I just focus on things I happen to enjoy.
Of course, there is data and learning helpful to Dakshana that come out of those visits, but in my opinion, it’s a perfect match. The folks running Dakshana in India are extremely good at it. I think they’re vastly better at it than I would be, and they have rightfully stressed that my job is to make sure Dakshana never has a financial hiccup. I’m proud to say it’s actually in the very best financial state it’s ever been. We’ve got a good engine because it’s a great match. The DNA of Dakshana – part American, part Indian – is a terrific DNA. The distance has allowed me to look at things in a more strategic way, and I think I’ve added plenty of value on the strategy and direction. I’ve added very little value on the nuts and bolts of running it on the ground in India.
Spier: That American/Indian combo slightly pains my heart because I feel like it should be a British/Indian thing.
Pabrai: Britain’s in there, too, Guy, because even though your education took place in England and mine in India, they have lots of similarities, so it’s deeply embedded as well.
Spier: In his book One Man’s View of the World, Lee Kuan Yew talks about America being an amazing place to live, but he also talks about how he’d go to the UK if he wanted to live somewhere. I guess the Indian experience in the United States has been an amazing one. Of course, it’s a broad experience. There have been amazing successes and also some people who have engaged in criminal behavior, but maybe you can give your take on having immigrated to the United States from India with your background and what it’s done for you.
Pabrai: People say, “America is an idea,” and it’s an incredible idea. I’m so glad this idea exists, and I think it has a physical presence. I love America because so many of the things possible for Americans and immigrants in this country are not possible anywhere else in the world. I’ll give you an example. I finished high school in Dubai and still have friends who live there. One of the things impacting your opportunity set is how big the country and the market are. You can be as smart as you want in Dubai, but you have limitations because of boundaries.
The United States has amazing advantages in terms of size. There are incredible natural resources and you overlay on top of those an incredible approach to developing human resources and an incredible openness to anyone to come in and do their thing. A company like Google doesn’t happen if you don’t have migration from Russia. We have all these amazing advantages in the United States. I think there is no other country on the planet which can come close. In fact, I feel now that the United States is the real emerging market. People start looking in different nooks and crannies around the world for emerging markets and where the growth is going to come from, but I think America has so many intrinsic strengths that are getting more and more prominent. For example, the whole shale gas revolution is a huge tailwind for the United States, as is having all the leading universities. The country is still a massive importer of incredible talent (another huge tailwind), and if the government gets immigration fixed, those tailwinds will get even stronger. No other country has those advantages.
Spier: That’s absolutely right, but I’d argue that those of us who live outside the United States can still participate in the life of the country. I invest on equal terms to any American investor when it comes to information and insights.
Pabrai: You are enriching the United States, that’s the beauty of it.
Spier: By diverting capital from the global capital market into the United States, ensuring a lower cost of funds for American businesses. I think people all over the world are doing that. Going back to investing, why is it that so many smart people do things like, say, bet against a fixed exchange rate in Asia or continue to short stocks?
Pabrai: As Warren says, if you gave up 50 IQ points, you would actually do better. I think egos and too much intellectual power get in the way. Buffett’s approach of “Don’t invest in anything until it hits you like a 2×4 on the head” is blindingly obvious – do not invest in something which requires a 14-page thesis to explain why things will go your way; invest in something that requires four sentences.
We had the pleasure of hosting a live online Q&A with value superinvestor Guy Spier in the summer of 2015. With registrations at maximum capacity of 1,000 people more than a week before the call, Guy was able to get through only a small subset of the many insightful questions asked of him. The one-hour Q&A session ended up lasting nearly two hours.
Listen to the Q&A session with Guy Spier:
Read a transcript of this session, translated into Spanish.
The following transcript has been lightly edited for clarity. However, transcription errors likely remain. If in doubt, please listen to the audio replay.
John Mihaljevic, The Manual of Ideas: A very warm welcome to this Q&A session with Guy Spier. It’s such a pleasure for me to welcome here in Zurich my friend, mentor and value superinvestor, Guy Spier. He is the head of Aquamarine Capital Management and has written a wonderful book, The Education of a Value Investor.
Guy Spier: It’s a real pleasure to be here and thank you, everyone, for listening in. I don’t know that I even have one-hundredth or one-thousandth of the wisdom that Warren and Charlie do, so I’m both honored and a little bit surprised and bewildered. I want to make sure that we hear from the audience, so I’ve got the questions up there. I’m going to go to a few of them and then, John, I’ll come back to you to get some people to respond and just hear what people are thinking, so it’s interactive. Just to let you know where I am, I’m at my office in Zurich. Behind me, you should be able to see this bust of Charlie Munger. I gave one of those to John Mihaljevic, but then he gave it away to the Dakshana Foundation. Then also behind me, you can see a photograph of Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, so I’m at my office at my desk.
Onto the questions. We’ve received a series of questions from Ben Schmidt. One of the questions that Ben has asked says, “As I perceive it, Aquamarine is a one-man show. Where does Guy Spier see the merits of solitary analysis versus having a regular sparring partner on investment ideas?” There’s so much evidence that shows that investment decisions are better taken by an individual rather than a committee. I’m, in a way, a one-man show by design, but that doesn’t mean to say that I don’t have many conversations about investments with all sorts of people. In fact, a lot of what I do here at my office is develop relationships with those people. It’s just that I don’t want to have those people as employees. I would also say that I’ve distinguished between two kinds of cognitive styles when it comes to discussing investments. There are people who want to have a really hard debate and express their views vociferously with some kind of sparring partner. I don’t think that that works very well for me because that when I express my opinions vociferously, I get caught into something and I will end up defending something that maybe I don’t agree with. I reduce my ability to change my mind, so I prefer to be around people who are helping me to keep my pond calm, so to speak.
Going to the second question, “Do I review my investment theses on a systematic and regular basis?” I like to believe that I review them on a regular basis, although it has not been systematic. I was deeply influenced by Rolf Dobelli, who wrote about how he considers news to be like sugar when it comes to a diet. You have your meats and potatoes, which is what we should be eating and news is like sugar. A tendency to want to try and review ideas too often may result in us going after news or going after the sugar of the investment world. My experience has been that what Rolf Dobelli says is the big events, you’ll hear about anyway, even if you don’t read a newspaper. I’d like to believe that the big events that happen to the portfolio companies, I’ve done sufficient research on them before I went into them and am around enough stuff and enough relationships that I hear about those companies, even if I’m not anally following them on a daily basis.
That said, as part of the registration for FINMA, I’ve had to give them a policy both on pre-trade checks, so I need to check with my risk department before I exit these trades and I need to write up a rationale. I agreed to that because I felt like it was a good idea. I felt like making myself write that up before I trade and once a quarter is a good thing. I guess, Ben, I am going to something that is more systematic. The key, though, is that I don’t want to spook myself out of an investment idea, so I looked at Moody’s recently. I sold out of Moody’s after the financial crisis. I had a 3x on it when I sold it, but I didn’t have about a 7x that I could have had. If I would have just not done anything, I would now have about a 15x, I believe. I allowed myself to be spooked out of it. We should realize that when bad events are happening, that will make us want to revisit our thesis and if we spend too much time in that kind of loop, we can convince ourselves an idea that is actually a perfectly good idea is not.
The example I’ve given – I don’t know where I gave it last – is that if you’re landing an airplane and I don’t have a pilot’s license, but I did take lessons as a child as far as landing an airplane, you have to keep your eye on the horizon and let the ground come up in your peripheral vision and fly the plane as you land it. If you look over to see where the ground is, the plane will roll. The plane goes where your eyes go and so the key in investing is to keep our eyes on the lookout for great businesses at discounted prices to survey the portfolio, but without getting into a deep dive or unbalanced dive on something that could lead us to get spooked out of the investment because often some of the investments that work really well have got hairy stuff associated with them. I’ll stop at that question. I’m going to do a couple from Nitin Khandkar, who also sent a number of questions in and then I’m going to go to Ben. Ben, I hope you’re online, just hear what you have to say and then I’m going to go to Nitin and hear what you have to say. Nitin’s first question is a review of Aquamarine Capital’s holdings from the last three quarters reveals that almost all its holdings are in US and European companies. What are my views on emerging markets? Would I consider investing in emerging markets? If yes, what is my favorite emerging market from a macro perspective?
It’s interesting to get this question in the light of an adjustment from China. A couple of days ago, I had a whole bunch of radio and TV stations asking me if I would comment. I ended up not doing any commentaries, so I can give you my commentary now, which is that I’m blown away by the way the world overreacted. Everybody knows that China and other emerging markets, they’re going to go through dips. They’re going to go through changes and adjustments. France is coming up against the demographic issue. It probably also needs to convert from being a production-based economy into more of a consumer-based economy. I don’t think there’s any doubt in anybody’s mind that that’s going to happen, so from an investing perspective, the turmoil over the last few days is a buying opportunity, nothing else.
Nitin, I do the very best I can to see the world as just one economy and one that’s sort of a place from which to select companies to invest. Having said that, nobody can ignore the fact that the institutional environment in the United States is the best in the world and we have various markets like the UK and others that are very, very good, but I’m trying to find things that I can buy nonetheless of where they’re based. To give an example, anybody who’s studied Berkshire Hathaway understands why Coca-Cola’s a great business. If I can find a Coca-Cola-like business in the Philippines or in Vietnam, yes, I would like to believe that I would invest, all other things being equal. I did that in the Philippines with a company called Alaska Milk that was written.
In general, when it comes to which emerging I like from a macro perspective, there’s no question that Indonesia’s really interesting given what’s happened, but I just spent a lot of time in Mexico, the first six months of this year and despite a lot of problems that Mexico has, it’s on the right path and I believe there’s another thing that happens. For example, Brazil is suffering right now, but one of the things that happens is when people get richer and people in Brazil have been getting richer, they tend to be more willing to focus on the negatives in their economy and in their country. That gets reported in the news an then there’s a bit more of a negative spin on that country. The best thing to do is to ignore a lot of that stuff. What I’m looking for is better businesses that I can understand at reasonable prices and I’ll look for those everywhere and anywhere and I’m not trying to say, “I need to invest in India,” or “I need to invest in Brazil.”
Another investment I’m about to probably do a post mortem on for my partnership meeting is this company, CRISIL. The fact is it was based in India was secondary to the fact that I was really interested in investing in the credit agencies. The commonality with Mohnish Pabrai’s portfolio—and it goes through Citigroup, Bank of America, GM, Fiat Chrysler, Horsehead, POSCO—how does my analysis and investing style differ from that of Mohnish? The first thing and this is not false modesty, Mohnish Pabrai is a better investor than I am. He’s a better investor because he has less fear of things that look risky to me and is able to act decisively in size when he sees something. I am more fearful and I’m less able to act decisively and with size. I have a harder time distinguishing with risk and uncertainty. Mohnish is able to see very clearly in many circumstances where something that is just risky to and I’m scared stiff about, Mohnish Pabrai can take a subset of those where he can show this is not actually risky, it’s just an uncertain outcome and can analyze it differently, but I’ve benefitted enormously from conversations with him.
In some cases there, Nitin, the one that was certainly the case, it was Bank of America. I figured out Bank of America I’d like to believe – Mohnish may think differently – either at the same time or even before Mohnish did, so not necessarily all ideas Mohnish figured out first, but whether it’s from conversations or from us engineering some of these investment decisions, the fact that it’s passed somebody else’s filter is a great positive and it took me a long time to learn that ‘not invested, invented here’ syndrome is very bad when it comes to investing. You really want to buy the ideas that have been vetted by other people if you can. It’s a much better way to invest, I believe. I will stop there and, John, perhaps Ben or Nitin, either of them want to have a comeback for me or some supplemental before we move onto other people.
MOI: A question from Ivan Kurniawan: He asks about you and Mohnish in relation to Benjamin Graham. He says, “Use the 35% minimum margin of safety as a yardstick before investing. What do you use as a yardstick in general?”
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The Phillips Conversations: Steve Jordon
January 29, 2018 in Audio, Full Video, The Phillips Conversations, TranscriptsThe following interview is part of The Phillips Conversations, hosted by Scott Phillips of Templeton and Phillips Capital Management.
MOI Global has partnered with Templeton Press to bring you this exclusive series of conversations on investing and the legacy of Sir John Templeton, one of the greatest investors of the 20th century.

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About the interviewee:
Steve Jordon joined The World-Herald as an intern in 1967 and has covered a range of stories since then, focusing mostly on business for the past 30 years. Steve is a native of West Virginia, came to Omaha as an Air Force dependent and graduated from the University of Nebraska.