Expectations Investing

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Taking Advantage of a Short-Term World Taking Advantage of a Short-Term World Michael J. Mauboussin Chief Investment Strategist Legg Mason Capital Management June 6, 2006 Expectations Investing Expectations Investing

Transcript of Expectations Investing

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Taking Advantage of a Short-Term WorldTaking Advantage of a Short-Term World

Michael J. MauboussinChief Investment StrategistLegg Mason Capital Management

June 6, 2006

Expectations Investing Expectations Investing

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Barriers to Long-Term Thinking

Availability bias Accounting versus economic focus

Recency bias Betting on what has worked

Stress Creates a short-term focus

Ince

ntiv

es

Psy

cho

log

y

Agency costs Agent/principal shift

Phenomenon EffectE

xpe

cta

tion

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Expectations gapsDiversity breakdowns

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Groundwork

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Groundwork

Perhaps the single greatest error in the

investment business is a failure to distinguish

between knowledge of a company’s fundamentals

and the expectations implied by the price.

Fundamentals versus expectations

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The issue is not which horse in the race is the most likely winner, but which horse or horses are offering odds that exceed their actual chances of victory . . . This may sound elementary, and many players may think that they are following this principle, but few actually do. Under this mindset, everything but the odds fades from view. There is no such thing as “liking” a horse to win a race, only an attractive discrepancy between his chances and his price.

Steven Crist, “Crist on Value,” in Beyer, et al., Bet with the Best(New York: Daily Racing Form Press, 2001), 64.

GroundworkFundamentals versus expectations

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I defined variant perception as holding a well-founded view that was meaningfully different from the market consensus . . . Understanding market expectation was at least as important as, and often different from, the fundamental knowledge.

Michael Steinhardt, No Bull: My Life in and Out of Markets(New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2001), 129.

GroundworkFundamentals versus expectations

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Introduction

Groundwork

Investing, like many things in life, relies on expectations

Changes in expectations trigger stock price changes

The investor’s key task is to anticipate expectations revisions

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Introduction

Expectations Investing

What expectations? Are all expectation revisions the same? What’s the best way to anticipate expectations

revision?

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Expectations are based on long-term cash flow Expectation revisions are not all the same Investors need to wed competitive strategy and

finance to best anticipate important revisions

Expectations InvestingIntroduction

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Three myths

Myth

Reality

The market isshort-termoriented

EPS dictate value P/E multiplesdetermine value

The markettakes a long-term view

EPS tell us littleabout value

P/E’s are afunction of value

Groundwork

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4% 8% 16%24%

4% 6.1x 12.5x 15.7x16.7x

6% 1.3 12.5 18.1 20.0

8% NM 12.5 21.3 24.2

10% NM 12.5 25.529.9

Return on Invested Capital

Ea

rnin

gs G

row

th

Assumes all equity financed; 8% WACC; 20-year forecast period.

ROIC and P/E multiples—theory

Groundwork

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How the MarketValues Stocks

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(1) Cash flow

(2) Risk Value

(3) Forecast horizon

These drivers are expectational in the stock market

First principlesBasics of Valuation

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CashEarnings

• Volume• Pricing • Expenses• Leases • Tax Provision• Deferred Taxes• Tax Shield

Sales

OperatingMargin

CashTaxes

Free Cash Flow

Cash availablefor distribution toall claimholders

Investment

minus

WorkingCapital

CapitalExpenditures

Acquisitions/Divestitures

∆• A/R• Inventories• A/P

• Net PP&E• Operating Leases

Cash flow

Basics of Valuation

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Amazon (2005)Basics of Valuation

In $ millions Earnings Adjustment Cash FlowCash flow as a %

of income stmt itemRevenuesNet Sales 8490.0Accounts receivable, net and other current assets (84.0)

8,406.0 99.0%Cost of Sales (6,451.0)Inventories (104.0)Accounts payable 274.0Accrued expenses and other current liabilities 60.0Additions to unearned revenue 156.0Interest payable

(6,065.0) 94.0%Depreciation and amortizationDepreciation of fixed assets, including internal-use software and website development, and other amortization 121.0Capital Expenditures: purchases of fixed assets, including internal-use software and website development (204.0)

(83.0)Operating ExpensesFullfillment (745.0)Marketing (198.0)Technology and content (451.0)General and administrative (166.0)Stock-based compensation 87.0Amortization of previously unearned revenue (149.0)Other operating (income) expense (47.0) 7.0Gains on sales of marketable securities (1.0)

(1,663.0) 103.5%Interest income 44.0Interest expense (92.0)Non-cash interest expense and other 5.0Other (expense) income, net 2.0Remeasurements and other 42.0 (42.0)

(41.0)Provision (benefit) for income taxes (95.0)Deferred income taxes 70.0Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle 26.0 (26.0)

(25.0)Reported Net Income 359.0Operating Net Income 454.0Cash Flow 529.0 116.5%

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Opportunity cost of capital providers Cost of equity is greater than the cost of debt Cost of capital can be tricky to estimate

Cost of capitalBasics of Valuation

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Period of time a company can generate excess returns on new investments

Competitive advantage period (CAP)

Time

CAP

Exc

ess

Re

turn

s

Basics of Valuation

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Competitive advantage period (CAP)Basics of Valuation

(15)(12)

(9)(6)(3)0369

1215

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Years Forward After Quartile Ranking

CF

RO

I (%

)

1 2 3 4

U.S. Technology CFROI Fade

Source: HOLT.

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Reversion to the mean fastest in fast-changing industries

Some companies and industries demonstrate persistence

CAPs cluster by investment neighborhood

Competitive advantage period (CAP)Basics of Valuation

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Expectations Investing Process

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A fundamental shift in stock selection

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The Expectations Investing Steps

1. Estimate price-implied expectations

2. Identify expectations opportunities

3. Make buy and sell decisions

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Uses the sound DCF model Bypasses need to forecast Overcomes the shortcomings of traditional

analysis (i.e., price/earnings ratio)

Step 1: Estimate price implied expectations

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Apply appropriate competitive strategy framework

Determine which expectations revisions matter most

Value neutral incremental returns Value creating incremental growth

Step 2: Identify expectations opportunities

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Five forces – assessing industry structure Value chain – assessing activities and where companies

create value Innovator’s dilemma – why great companies fail Information rules – contrast between physical and

knowledge businesses Game theory – capacity additions and pricing

Competitive strategy analysis

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Expectations infrastructure

Expectations Investing

Sales

1Volume

2Price and

Mix

3Operating Leverage

4Economies

of Scale

5Cost

Efficiencies

6Investment Efficiencies

Sales Growth Rate (%)

Operating Profit

Margin (%)

Incremental Investment

Rate (%)

Operating Costs

Investments

Operating Value Drivers

Value Factors

Value Triggers

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Expected value analysis Frequency of correctness is not the key Magnitude of correctness matters

Incorporate margin of safety Turnover Transaction costs Taxes

Consider decision-making pitfalls

Step 3: Make buy and sell decisions

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Cash flow 6.5% EBITA growth

45% Incremental investment rate

Cost of capital 7.6% $44

CAP 12 years

Coca-ColaCase Study

Source: Value Line Investment Survey, May 5, 2006, and LMCM estimates.

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Barriers to Long Term Thinking

Availability bias Accounting versus economic focus

Recency bias Betting on what has worked

Stress Creates a short-term focus

Ince

ntiv

es

Psy

cho

log

y

Agency costs Agent/principal shift

Phenomenon EffectE

xpe

cta

tion

s

Expectations gapsDiversity breakdowns

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expectationsinvesting.com

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Taking Advantage of a Short-Term WorldTaking Advantage of a Short-Term World

Michael J. MauboussinChief Investment StrategistLegg Mason Capital Management

June 6, 2006

Expectations Investing Expectations Investing

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The views expressed in this commentary reflect those of Legg Mason Capital Management (LMCM) as of the date of this commentary. These views are subject to change at any time based on market or other conditions, and LMCM disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied upon as investment advice and, because investment decisions for clients of LMCM are based on numerous factors, may not be relied upon as an indication of trading intent on behalf of the firm. The information provided in this commentary should not be considered a recommendation by LMCM or any of its affiliates to purchase or sell any security. To the extent specific securities are mentioned in the commentary, they have been selected by the author on an objective basis to illustrate views expressed in the commentary. If specific securities are mentioned, they do not represent all of the securities purchased, sold or recommended for clients of LMCM and it should not be assumed that investments in such securities have been or will be profitable. There is no assurance that any security mentioned in the commentary has ever been, or will in the future be, recommended to clients of LMCM. Employees of LMCM and its affiliates may own securities referenced herein.