Title: Financial Intelligence
1Financial Intelligence Personal Finances
Investing 101
- Bob Y. Chan
- Outline fore talk 4
- October 30, 2003
2Synopsis of last talk
- Whom do you work for?
- On borrowing money
- On Taxes
- How smart are you vs. the market?
3Outline for Talk 4
- A brief introduction to security analysis
- Fashion is the great governor of this world
- Firm foundations of stock value
- Efficient markets what does it mean?
4Introduction to security analysis
- Ultimately, want to make money
- Many different means
5Security analysis (cont.)
- Focus on
- Human nature / social behavior
- Macro-economic factors
- Market movements
- Industries / sectors
- Individual companies
- Short-term price movements
6Security analysis (cont.)
- Some fundamental assumptions
- Smart people can beat other (average) investors
- You can find out what other people neglect
- These findings are worth something
- May be, the market has made a mistake
- Then finally, the market finds out the mistake
and corrects it! (very important)
7Security analysis (cont.)
- What if these assumptions are wrong?
- The market is too smart
- Hundreds of smart (and hungry) people already
working very hard to dig out whatever is worth
something - Institutions hire Ph.D.s, MBAs, CFAs, etc. and
use super computers to make better search! - Is there really anything left?
8Security analysis (cont.)
- The market is too dumb
- Suppose you are very smart, and the market makes
a mistake - What if you are the only smart guy, and the other
people are always very dumb? - If the market does not corrects itself, your
finding is still worthless!
9Security analysis (cont.)
- So why bother?
- You need some metrics to swim in the sea of
investing - Build a consistently effective investment process
- Allows you to eliminate what does not work
- If you know more about investing, you can avoid
making big mistakes!
10Example - skirt analysis
- Rationale market tends to move up when people
feel merry and move down when people feel bad - Observation ladies (esp. young ladies) tend to
wear shorter skirts when the general atmosphere
is more happy
11Skirt analysis (cont.)
- Rule when young ladies wear short skirt, markets
tend to move up - If the skirt length is shorter, markets tend to
move higher - Problem to the professionals this is too
simple!
12Football analysis
- Background
- American football has two leagues
- NFL
- AFL
- Each year (in January) a team will win the world
championship called Super Bowl - Just looking at records, NFL teams win more
championships
13Football analysis (cont.)
- Just looking at statistics, stock market usually
moves up at end of year - Prediction rule if an NFL team wins the Super
Bowl, the stock market will go up! - Statistical analysis this is amazingly accurate
- Problem with a pro but there is no reason!
14Security analysis
- Bottom line
- Do you really care?
- Which one can you tolerate?
- It is very simple
- There is no rationale
- It does not work
15Castle-in-the-Air
- Fashion is the great governor of this world
- Everything in this world is the result of crowd
psychology - Price of anything is determined by the law of
supply and demand - Key is to catch what the market thinks before
others do!
16The Internet bubble - Netscape
- August 8, 1994 Netscape listed on NASDAQ
- Founded by Jim Clark, a 54 yr old ex-Stanford
professor who founded Silicon Graphics Inc. - First attempt to exploit the Internet for
commercial use
17Netscape (cont.)
- Advanced Research Project Agency Network
(ARPANET) was founded in 1960s as a Dept. of
Defense project on various university campus - Grew to around 100,000 sites in 1989
- 1989 Tim Berners-Lee in Geneva invented
specifications and named it World Wide Web and
the HTML
18Netscape (cont.)
- However, searching on the WWW was still painfully
difficult - 1992 Marc Andreessen, 21, was studying at U. of
Illinois and worked part time for 6.85 / hr at
National Center for Supercomputing Applications
19Netscape (cont.)
- Developed a software called Mosaic that allows
cut and paste of words, pictures, etc. - Allows content to be searched and viewed with
ease browsing was made possible Mosaic
became the predominant browser on WWW
20Netscape (cont.)
- Soon 1,000,000 were using Mosaic to browse the
WWW, and Internet usage exploded with annual
growth rate 342,000 - Jan 1994 Jim Clark was kicked out of SGI and
found Andreesseen on the web - Founded Mosaic Communications and developed
Mozilla
21Netscape (cont.)
- Company later renamed Netscape software
Navigator - Clark put in 4.25 million of his own money
- funded by venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins
Caufield Byers with 5 million for 20 - 1995 Jim Barksdale (from McCaw Cellular) joined
as CEO
22Netscape (cont.)
- Wanted to sell 5 million shares for 12 14 a
share - Reports shown that investors wanted to buy 100
million shares - Finally, decided to double IPO price at 28
(market capitalization 1 billion!)
23Netscape (cont.)
- When market opened, there was no trading in 90
minutes - First ask was 71
- Market closed at 58.25, market capitalization
of Netscape became 2.3 billion
24The Internet bubble - Yahoo
- Founded by Jerry Yang and David Filo when both
were graduate students at Stanford - As their Ph.D. adviser went on sabbatical, they
used the computer (and the Internet) to kill time - Need new tools to organize the rapidly growing
contents
25Yahoo (cont.)
- Invented indexing tool called Jerrys Fast Track
to Mosaic (i.e., early version of Netscape),
later called Jerry and Daves Guide to the World
Wide Web - Many people use this free tool, page views grew
to 100,000 in late 1994
26Yahoo (cont.)
- Desperately need money to continue the service
- Talked to venture capital firm Sequoia Capital,
backer of Oracle, Cisco, etc. - Paid 1 million for 25 in Spring of 1995
- Toke in Tim Koogle (aged 43) to run the company
27Yahoo (cont.)
- April 12, 1996 IPO
- Priced at 13, opened at 24.5, zoomed to 43 and
closed at 33 - On the first day of trading, market
capitalization was 849 million - Yang and Filo were each worth 132 million!
28Internet bubble (cont.)
- After these stars many Internet companies were
offered to the market - Most do not have earnings, dividends, or even
assets! - Valuation was purely based on how much investors
are willing to pay!
29Castle-in-the-air - critique
- Trick works as long as there is another bigger
fool in line - People do make money, many lose money later
- Depends on the investment horizon
- Can you really get out before the music stops?
30Firm foundation approach
- Focus on investments that pays their own way
- Look at
- Earnings
- Dividend
- Growth rate
- Usually need knowledge in accounting and economics
31Firm foundation (cont.)
- Basically fundamental analysis was founded in
1930s after the Wall Street collapsed in 1929 - Before that, no one knew how to measure the value
of a stock scientifically - Look at the intrinsic value of a comapny
32Firm foundation (cont.)
- But, even the masters make big mistakes
- 1929 Irwin Fisher, a Yale Professor known as
father of intrinsic value, said that the stock
market had reached an everlasting plateau - In the great depression, Graham and Dodd wrote a
book Security Analysis, arguing that there is
an intrinsic value of a stock given the dividend
and earning of the company
33Firm foundation (cont.)
- Many things got developed since then. But, one
student of Benjamin Graham studied the
fundamental analysis well got successful in
real life investment - Guys name is called Warren Buffett. He acquired
a listed spinning mill called Berkshire Hathaway
and turned it into an investment company
34Firm foundation (cont.)
- Stock price of Berkshire Hathaway was 71 in
1973. Today it is 76,500 - Warren Buffet is one of the richest man in the
world
35What we know about capital markets
- How accurate knowledge plays depends on what
time horizon we are looking at - Over long period, market would follow laws of
economics (and physics!) - Within short period, there can be wide and
erratic swings (because human psychology plays a
role)
36If so, can we predict the future?
- Depends how efficient is the capital market
- If the market is efficient, then information gets
reflected in prices fairly quickly - Note refer to available information, which might
not be always true
37Can we predict the future? (cont.)
- If all information is always reflected in the
prices, the change in the price reflects new
information - If there is any pattern in the arrival of
information, even the pattern should be reflected - Hence only new information moves prices
38Can we predict the future? (cont.)
- New information arrives randomly
- Therefore prices would follow a random walk
39Random walk
- Implications
- Prices are good indicators of value
- The past cannot predict the future
- Prices follow a random walk
- Is it true?
40Random walk (cont.)
- In the last 30 years, thousands of studies had
been done on this subject - Basically the answer is mostly yes
- Especially, you cannot use the past to predict
the future - This is particularly true when we look at very
short time horizon
41Random walk (cont.)
- However, over the medium to long term, prices
tend to go back to basics (economics, accounting
information, etc.) - Also the property of mean reversion that
prices tend to swing back to a long run
equilibrium level
42Random walk (cont.)
- Conclusion even with random walk (i.e.,
efficient capital markets), you can plan your
investment well and go well