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Vishal Khandelwal

Corporate Governance: How They Pay Themselves

April 20, 2015

The organizers of a tennis tournament needed money. They approached the CEO of a big company and asked him to sponsor the tournament.

“How much?” asked the CEO.

“One million,” said the organizer.

“That is too much money,” said the CEO.

“Not if you consider the fact that you personally can play one match, sit at the honorary stand next to a member of the presidential family and be the one that hands over the prize,” said the organizer.

“Where do I sign?” said the CEO.

That’s the power of incentives, you see. People do what they perceive as in their best interest and are biased by incentives.

Look at the brokerage business. Stock brokers have a strong incentive to get us to trade. They advise us what to buy and sell. Volume creates commissions. Investment bankers encourage overpriced acquisitions to generate fees. Investment bankers have every incentive to get initial public offerings (IPO) deals done, regardless of the company’s quality. Their compensation is tied to the revenues the deal brings in. Analysts are rewarded for helping sell the IPO. Brokers want to move the stock.

What did Groucho Marx say? “I made a killing on Wall Street a few years ago…I shot my broker.”

Similarly, in the medical field, some psychologists ensure themselves future income by telling their patients that another visit is required. And they don’t talk about the limits of their knowledge. Their careers are at stake. As American actor Walther Matthau said, “My doctor gave me six months to live. When I told him I couldn’t pay the bill, he gave me six more months.”
[Read more…] about Corporate Governance: How They Pay Themselves

InvestorInsights: Shyam Sekhar

April 10, 2015

Highly experienced investor Shyam Sekhar shares his invaluable insights on the process and philosophy of sensible, long-term investing.

Be brave. Take risks. Nothing can substitute experience.” The words of Paul Coelho aptly summaries the journey of Shyam Sekhar. Tossing up between studying economics and engineering, he reluctantly took on the second. After completing engineering, his earlier calling returned. The hunger and curiosity of economics and business took over. Hanging around with fellow investors who shared the same passion, he spent the next few years thinking economics and stocks every waking hour. Equity research in India was an evolving discipline in the early nineties and setting up a research desk was the logical next. But, what made it unique was that he never sold his research. Research was proprietary and used by a small group of investors with shared beliefs and values.

Being an independent thinker with set values and beliefs, Shyam took a conscious decision never to work in any company. Knowing that it made sense not to work in an environment where the values mismatched, he dreamt of building a clean consulting business in investment strategy on his own. But, the nineties were early days. That left him with investing as the only option. So building a proprietary portfolio was the way to go. Researching businesses, spotting opportunities and building portfolios was all he did for a decade.

The dream of building an investment strategy business got anchored in 2003. He started Smartvalue Equisearch private limited as an investment strategy firm. Over the next eight years, he built a professional research and strategy firm with domain expertise in equity research, investment strategy, fund research and investment analytics. The firm is poised to break new ground with ithought, its wealth management division that rolled in 2008 just when the markets bottomed. The dream of building an investor centric business of scale and substance is now playing out.

In this interview with Safal Niveshak, Shyam lays bare his investment philosophy and practices and his big learning and mistakes over the past two decades.

Safal Niveshak (SN): I’ll start with a very regular question about your background, how you got interested in investing and how you evolved over time as an investor.

Shyam Sekhar (SS): I am a graduate in chemical engineering. My family had a small business in chemicals. We used to make paints. We still make paints. After my graduation, I used to spend some time with my neighbour. He was a renowned chartered accountant, M. K. Sudarshan. He got me interested in the stock market. Those days, the stock market wasn’t like these days, when you get live quotes. None of this was there. Stock market was conducted in isolation, just like the courts function. Nobody knew what was happening inside. So at the end of the day’s trade at 3:15 PM, there would be a radio bulletin which gave you the closing prices of the day. That’s all you heard. And the next morning, you had to see the papers which would give you some marker rates. No averages, no volumes, nothing. It gave you a set of trade rates/quotes which would include the low the high and two more sample rates. We got only the rate of Chennai those days. Bombay rates would come one day later, when we went and bought a financial paper which was published out of Bombay. In 1990, Chennai didn’t have a business edition of any newspaper. So we would go and buy, because my neighbour (Mr. Sudarshan) was an avid investor, and everyday he would go and buy a Bombay edition of a paper. So we would board a bus and go to some part in the CBD where these papers would be sold by just one newspaper vendor. I would accompany him during these travels because it was my vacation and I had nothing to do. During these journeys I used to pick his brains about the working of the stock market.

Mr. Sudarshan was not only a Chartered Accountant but he also understood businesses very well. So his investing was based on the understanding of the future of businesses and how it would perform. And he was an avid investor who bought and never sold. This is a rare quality. The more I am in the market, the more I realise that the quality of an investor who buys and never sells is rarest of rare.

To me, at that time, it was very amusing that he never sold actually. And even to this day, when he is no more, most of his shares are still there. His family is still retaining those shares.

Anyways, he used to explain me what each business was and what it did. This created a lot of interest in me. I was reading lot of newspapers those days and that helped me become an avid reader from a very young age. Newspaper reading was one habit which I had acquired because of my interest in politics, and in the stock market.
[Read more…] about InvestorInsights: Shyam Sekhar

Spotlight: Reasonable Expectations

April 3, 2015

Unreasonable expectations cause most people to make terrible mistakes when it comes to stock market investing. We share varied thoughts on what makes for reasonable expectations

What do we want out of life? To be healthy, happy with our families, in our work, etc? What interferes with this? Isn’t it often emotions like fear, anger, worry, disappointment, stress, and sadness caused by problems, mistakes, losses, and unreasonable expectations?

Well, that last one – unreasonable expectations – is what causes most people to make terrible mistakes when it comes to stock market investing.

Consider the period of January 2006 when Google announced its financial results for the final quarter of 2005. While the company reported a sales growth of a whopping 97%, its net profit had surged by 82% over the same quarter of previous year.

Now, you would consider this to be a magnificent quarter, right? Well, investors in Google didn’t! As a reaction to these phenomenal figures, Google’s stock tumbled 16% in a matter of second. Trading in the stock had to be interrupted. When it resumed, the stock plunged another 15%. Absolute panic!

Let’s now head to April 2003, when Infosys had announced its fourth quarter and full year results for FY03. I still remember that day, because I was just a week into my new job as a stock market analyst, and was in charge of handling the software sector, and thus Infosys came under my coverage.

The company had just announced its result for the quarter and full-year ended March 2003. For the full-year, it had recorded 39% and 19% growth in sales and net profit respectively. Now you would imagine that these were pretty good growth numbers, right? I did too. But to my horror, the stock crashed by 37% over the next two days.

Imagine losing one-third of your capital in a span of two days. How would you feel? While I was not an investor in Infosys then, but being new to the stock markets, and in charge of research on Infosys, I was utterly confused, and at the same time, scared seeing such a sharp fall in the stock price.
“What’s wrong with the markets?” I asked my senior colleague. “Infosys has reported such a good result, so why has its stock been punished so badly?”
[Read more…] about Spotlight: Reasonable Expectations

Industry Scan: Airlines

March 31, 2015

We analyse the Airline industry and bring forth the reasons why despite some bright spots, it has been a gruesome
play as far as investors are concerned.

Ever since the invention of the airplane, the industry has been one of the world’s most eye-catching. The appeal of global air travel has always drawn capital to the industry. So finding money has never been the problem – making consistent profits has always been the challenge.

The industry is much better known for losing money than for making it. When trying to understand what’s wrong with airlines, it’s important to remember that the industry is:

Airlines, globally, has never been a profitable business. In fact, when someone once asked Sir Richard Branson, the much-acclaimed chief of Virgin Airlines, how to become a millionaire, he replied, “That’s easy. First you become a billionaire and then you buy an airline.”

Here is what Warren Buffett wrote in his annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders in 2007:

The worst sort of business is one that grows rapidly, requires significant capital to engender the growth, and then earns little or no money. Think airlines. Here a durable competitive advantage has proven elusive ever since the days of the Wright Brothers. Indeed, if a farsighted capitalist had been present at Kitty Hawk, he would have done his successors a huge favour by shooting Orville down.

The airline industry’s demand for capital ever since that first flight has been insatiable. Investors have poured money into a bottomless pit, attracted by growth when they should have been repelled by it.

• Highly fixed capital intensive – Needs consistent inflow of money for expansion (an average airplane costs around US$ 200 million).
• Heavily dependent on economic cycles – Every bad phase is the worst phase.
• Hamstrung by volatile fuel costs – Can’t do without it.
• Selling what is essentially a commodity (airline seats) – No one has reasons to ask for a higher
price than competitors.
• A real bankruptcy risk – What we are seeing so often these days (Kingfisher, Spicejet, etc.).

This all adds up to create a pretty unattractive picture. Essentially, over the course of multiple economic cycles, these companies can’t earn more than their costs to operate. And as an investor, over many years, it is tough to make money holding onto airline stocks.

You can’t sleep peacefully at night if you are an investor in such stocks. Just a look at the financial performance of airline companies on the next page will tell you why these are such gruesome businesses.

Rs 100 invested in March 2005 is now worth…

As you can see from the three tables above – Jet Airways, Spicejet, and Indigo – you can notice that Indigo, which is not a listed company, has been an exception in the Indian airline industry, constantly churning out profits year after year. While not many details are available on the company’s operations, constant profits have been attributed to a combination of operational performance and financial engineering (sale-and-leaseback transactions). Even then, the company has not been completely immune to the ills of the airline industry (currency volatility, cut-throat competition and high jet fuel costs), and has seen a volatile earnings growth trajectory in the past three years. Profits, for instance, declined almost 60% YoY in FY14.

Airline: Porter’s Five Forces Analysis

1. Bargaining Power of Buyers

• Low switching costs for buyers.
• Few airline operators and thus the choices available to buyers are low.
• Overall, low bargaining power of buyers.

2. Bargaining Power of Suppliers

• Major suppliers are the airplane manufacturers, with the two biggest being Boeing and Airbus.
• Airline companies cannot easily switch suppliers, because having the same supplier supplying similar
kinds of planes with standardized components helps the former keep operational costs lower. Most airline
companies have long term contracts with their
suppliers.
• It is difficult to enter into plane manufacturing because of the capital and expertise needed. If a supplier, say, Boeing, in harmony with its peer Airbus changes the credit terms by even a small amount, it could mean a significant loss for airline firms.
• For airline manufacturers (suppliers), airline companies are the only source of income, and thus having a cordial relationship is extremely important.
• Overall, medium to low bargaining power of suppliers.

3. Threat of New Entrants

• Airlines industry is highly regulated, and any new player – even with deep pockets – cannot enter at will.

• Switching costs for customers, however, is low and thus a new player can gain market share by keeping costs and thus prices lower than competitors (though this is extremely difficult to do).
• Overall, low threat of new entrants.

4. Threat of Substitutes

• No real substitutes given the time saving benefit airline travel provides. But, for short distances, train and bus travel are substitutes.
• For long distances, often airlines are cheaper or at par with other modes.
• Airlines surpass all other forms of transportation when it comes to cost, convenience, and sometimes service.
• Overall, low threat from substitutes.

5. Rivalry among Existing Players

• Rivalry is intense in the airline industry, despite limited number of players.
• Fixed costs are extremely high in this industry, and thus airlines compete hard for customers to at least meet these costs.
• High fixed costs also makes exit from the industry extremely difficult
• While some players in India like Indigo have maintained market leadership, the overall market remains almost equally distributed largely because switching costs are low.
• Overall competitive rivalry is high and thus creates a threat.

As we see from the above analysis, the strongest forces in the airline industry is the rivalry or competition among existing firms and some power that suppliers have. The rivalry of existing players is high and this restricts new players. Plus, capital requirements are huge and constant.

In his 2007 letter to shareholders, Warren Buffett wrote that a durable competitive advantage in the airline industry “has proven elusive ever since the days of the Wright Brothers.”

“Indeed, if a farsighted capitalist had been present at Kitty Hawk, he would have done his successors a huge favor by shooting Orville down,” he joked. “The airline industry’s demand for capital ever since that first flight has been insatiable. Investors have poured money into a bottomless pit.”

Ethical Analyst: Conflict of Interest

March 20, 2015

Reputation is difficult to build but easy to lose. How we hope people in the investment industry respect this for a fact. Sadly, most don’t!

“We’ve given you so much information on our business. Now what can you do for us?” I was stumped to hear this from the CFO of a “reputed” mid-size Indian IT services company when I went to meet him sometime in 2009. I had received several such requests from lower rank managers of other companies in the past, but to expect this from a CFO was like too much!

This harmless-sounding question – “What can you do for us” – means a lot when you are stock market analyst who is preparing to write a report on a company. When a top manager asks an analyst as to what he can do for the former’s company, he is indirectly nudging the latter to write a positive report (a ‘Buy’ recommendation) on the stock. Yeah, that’s true!
[Read more…] about Ethical Analyst: Conflict of Interest

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