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Security Analysis

Security Analysis. Introduction to Finance 450 Spring Semester, 2003 (Notes adapted from The Inefficient Stock Market and The New Finance , both by Robert A. Haugen). Background:. The evolution of academic finance. 1930’s. 40’s. 50’s. 60’s. 70’s. 80’s. 90’s. beyond.

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Security Analysis

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  1. Security Analysis Introduction to Finance 450 Spring Semester, 2003 (Notes adapted from The Inefficient Stock Market and The New Finance, both by Robert A. Haugen)

  2. Background: • The evolution of academic finance.

  3. 1930’s 40’s 50’s 60’s 70’s 80’s 90’s beyond The Evolution of Academic Finance The Old Finance The Old Finance Theme:Analysis of Financial Statements and the Nature of Financial Claims Paradigms: Security Analysis Uses and Rights of Financial Claims (Graham & Dodd)(Dewing) Foundation: Accounting and Law

  4. The Old Finance • What Warren Buffett was taught • The tradition in which he follows • Focus on security analysis and value investing • What I expected to learn more about in the MBA program

  5. 1930’s 40’s 50’s 60’s 70’s 80’s 90’s beyond The Evolution of Academic Finance The Old Finance Bob goes to college Modern Finance Modern Finance Theme: Valuation Based on Rational Economic Behavior Paradigms: Optimization Irrelevance CAPM EMH (Markowitz)(Modigliani & Miller) (Sharpe, Lintner & Mossen) (Fama) Foundation: Financial Economics

  6. Modern Finance • What I was taught in my MBA program (and throughout most of my Ph.D. program) • My MBA program’s equivalent of the Portfolio and Security Analysis class taught: • Warren Buffett (one of my inspirations for studying investments in the first place) viewed as an anomaly • Focus of course = theory behind why you should just invest in index funds • No room for trying to achieve market-beating performance (except as a reward for taking on more risk)

  7. The Three Foundations of Modern Finance • Portfolio Theory (Ch. 8) • The Tool • Invented in 1952 by Markowitz.

  8. Expected Return 10% Risk Lowest Risk Portfolio With a 10% Return individual stocks

  9. Expected Return Risk The Bullet The Efficient Set (Bullet)

  10. The Three Foundations of Modern Finance • Portfolio Theory (Ch. 8) • The Tool • Invented in 1952 by Markowitz. • CAPM (Ch. 9 & 10) • The Theory • Invented in early ‘60s by Sharpe, Lintner, & Mossin.

  11. Expected Return Us Risk Us on the Skin of The Bullet 10%

  12. Market Index Expected Return Risk We all Make the Market Index

  13. The Three Foundations of Modern Finance • Portfolio Theory (Ch. 8) • The Tool • Invented in 1952 by Markowitz. • CAPM (Ch. 9 & 10) • The Theory • Invented in early ‘60s by Sharpe, Lintner, & Mossin. • The Efficient Market Hypothesis (Ch. 7) • The Fantasy(? – Haugen’s view) • Invented by Fama, also in the early ‘60s.

  14. THE FAMA & FRENCH STUDY* • Accepted theories of Modern Finance predict that differences in expected stock returns should be related only to differences in risk . • Fama & French find beta is unimportant • (At least as the primary determinant of stock returns!) • Instead, book-to-price appears as the most important. *(E. Fama and K. French, 1992, “The Cross-section of Expected Stock Returns,” Journal of Finance)

  15. Book to Market as a Predictor of Return 25% 20% 15% Annualized Rate of Return 10% 5% 0% 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 High Book/Market Low Book/Market Value Growth

  16. Diamond Head & Diamond Bar The difference between the returns to value and growth found by Fama & French is incredibly large.

  17. The Roads to Diamond Bar and Diamond Head Cumulative Wealth $2,000,000 $1,500,000 $1,000,000 2.47% Real Return 15.18% Real Return $500,000 $0 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 46 48 50 52 54 56 58 60 62 64

  18. Moreover, Fama & French also find that value stocks actually have lower betas.

  19. 1 0.9 0.8 Book to Market Equity 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 Beta Book to Market Equity of Portfolios Ranked by Beta

  20. The Finance Profession Splits into Three Camps • Fama & French results are are an artifact of survival bias. • CAPM and Efficient Markets both still in (Kothari, Shanken & Sloan).

  21. Survival Bias The Compustat data base (used by Fama & French) was greatly expanded to cover 6000 companies in 1978. The histories of these companies were back-filled, but no companies were added that failed to survive through 1978.

  22. The Finance Profession Splits into Three Camps • Fama & French results are are an artifact of survival bias. • CAPM and Efficient Markets both still in (Kothari, Shanken & Sloan). • Differences in expected returns are expected risk premiums. • CAPM out Efficient Markets still in (Fama & French).

  23. However, Fama & French found that value stocks actually have lower betas, hence they would generally be considered less risky, not more. Nonetheless, Fama & French argue that, in some undefined way, the value stocks are riskier, and so they include the difference in returns between value and growth stocks as a risk factor in the three-factor model that they develop as an alternative to CAPM.

  24. 1 0.9 0.8 Book to Market Equity 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 Beta Book to Market Equity of Portfolios Ranked by Beta

  25. The Finance Profession Splits into Three Camps • Fama & French results are are an artifact of survival bias. • CAPM and Efficient Markets both still in (Kothari, Shanken & Sloan). • Differences in expected returns are expected risk premiums. • CAPM out Efficient Markets still in (Fama & French). • Differences in expected returns are a surprise to investors. • CAPM and Efficient Markets are both out (Haugen).

  26. Is Haugen Correct? Was the crash-and-burn of the Nasdaq and the demise of the telecom and dot-com sectors (except for, maybe, Amazon.com), together with the superior performance of, e.g., Berkshire-Hathaway relative to Pets.com and Homegrocer.com, actually anticipated by most investors? Many argued that the telecom and dot-com stocks had become overvalued, but few suggested that, long-term, they would actually underperform the value stocks. Few would argue that investors were not surprised by the rebound of the “old economy” stocks and the dramatic decline of the “new economy” ones.

  27. A New Paradigm • The Efficient Markets Hypothesis (EMH) has been the dominant paradigm in academic finance for the past 30 years • If it needs to be replaced, then what comes next? • Two alternative viewpoints: • Michael Mauboussin / Robert G. Hagstrom • Mauboussin = Security Analysis professor at Columbia Business School; managing director at CSFB • Hagstrom = author of The Warren Buffett Portfolio; manager of the Legg Mason Focus Trust • Robert A. Haugen • Emeritus Professor of Finance at U.C., Irvine; Founding partner, Haugen Custom Financial Systems

  28. Haugen’s View • Author of “The Inefficient Stock Market” • www.haugensystems.com • The EMH as a “religion” • Markets as Inefficient • “The Wrong 20-Yard Line” (not even close to being efficient) • But still hard to beat the market due to extensive “noise” • Need to make best use of available tools • Ad hoc factor model • For determining expected returns and covariances for stocks • Markowitz portfolio optimization • For best combining the stocks into portfolios • Primacy of portfolio analysis

  29. Haugen’s View Primacy of Portfolio Analysis • Quantitative analysis for determining stock expected returns and covariances • Portfolio as the primary unit of security analysis • Not concerned about characteristics of individual stocks, per se, but with what they contribute to the overall portfolio • Caesar salad analogy • No single ingredient tastes like the completed salad, so don’t screen for specific ingredients that do • Each unique ingredient contributes to the overall taste • Water analogy • Don’t learn about characteristics of H2O by studying characteristics of Hydrogen and Oxygen Haugen’s view of the next paradigm in finance:

  30. 1930’s 40’s 50’s 60’s 70’s 80’s 90’s beyond The Evolution of Academic Finance The Old Finance Bob goes to college The New Finance Modern Finance The New Finance Theme: Inefficient Markets Paradigms: Inductive ad hoc Factor Models Behavioral Models Expected Return Risk (Haugen) (Chen, Roll & Ross) (Kahneman & Tversky) Foundation: Statistics, Econometrics, and Psychology

  31. Mauboussin’s View • www.capatcolumbia.com – “Shift Happens” • Similar to view of Robert Hagstrom, author of “The Warren Buffett Portfolio” • The EMH as a “stretched” paradigm • Fama quotation – “I think the crash in ’87 was a mistake” • Market as Complex Adaptive System • More realistic paradigm • Markets constantly evolve as participants search for new ways to anticipate the future, learning new rules (but forgetting old ones!) • Market’s evolution not “random,” but, for the most part, not predictable either • Market as “effectively” efficient

  32. Mauboussin’s View • Potential sources for value-added: • Information • Analysis / Valuation • Exploiting psychological biases of investors / making sure to avoid these biases in one’s own investment decisions • Primacy ofsecurityanalysis • Back to basics • Cut through Gordian knot of trying to anticipate what all the other investors will anticipate that the market as a whole will anticipate that a stock will do • Over time, stock market values tend to track business values, despite short-term trips away from this foundation of value • Warren Buffett approach

  33. Two Different Views Is there any common ground? • Both agree with the need for a new paradigm • CAPM & Random Walk Theory are incomplete, at best • Complex Adaptive System Theory or “The New Finance”? • Both agree on the importance of taking investor psychology (“behavioral finance”) into account • Interestingly, despite following radically different approaches, both tend the favor a value-oriented approach to investing • Ironically, Haugen’s selected companies bear even greater similarity to Buffett’s type of companies than do Mauboussin’s • Chaos and fractal theory could also provide some additional common ground • Will come back and talk more about both of these perspectives as we move through the course

  34. Finance 450 vs. 350 • Finance 350 • More applied • More institutional overview • Focus on what things there are to look at • Finance 450 • More theoretical • More in-depth • More quantitative • Focus on how to look at the things that are there • Foundations of Security and Portfolio Analysis • Provided by Reilly & Brown • Extensions, Alternatives, & Applications • Provided by Haugen, Mauboussin, and Hagstrom

  35. General Background • There are two broad schools of thought regarding the setting of stocks prices: • “Firm Foundation” • “Castle-in-the-Air” • Need a model or thought process that can capture or account for both

  36. “Firm Foundation” • Intrinsic value as the driver of prices (at least in the long run) • Benjamin Graham • John Burr Williams • Warren Buffett • Value based on future earnings / dividend stream

  37. “Castle-in-the-Air” • Investor psychology as the driver of prices (esp. in the short run) • John Maynard Keynes • William O’Neill • George Soros • Value based on “greater fool theory” • “Perception is reality”

  38. Background (Cont.) • Role of Investment Analysis: • Flip side of Corporate Finance • The higher is the marginal investor’s required rate of return, ceteris paribus, the higher will be a corporation’s WACC, and the fewer the number of capital budgeting projects that will have a positive NPV • “Two sides of the same coin” • Main factor driving higher required returns is the amount of risk involved in an investment • First question to ask when examining a business – is it creating or destroying value??

  39. ROI > WACC ROI = WACC ROI < WACC Value created Value neutral Value negative Types of Business Projects

  40. Valuing a Business • Course will focus on equities, but valuation techniques used are similar for other types of corporate issues • Some basic concepts: • Value of assets = f(cash generated) balance sheet  value • Value – liabilities = equity concept of residual claim for equities • Equities can be viewed as a “derivative” market • Value largely independent of capital structure (M&M Irrelevance) • Q: How are returns best measured?

  41. Valuing a Business Example: Lemonade Stand at the Beach • $100 needed to start • Bank loan – 10% = WACC • Outcomes • $115 – value created – economic profit = $5 • $110 – value neutral – economic profit = $0 • $105 – value destroyed – economic profit = -$5 • Note: assumes no opportunity cost for time spent hanging around at the beach! • Cash-in vs. cash-out • No question of short-term vs. long-term • Understand how value is created

  42. Key aspects of valuing a business Competitive dynamics Competitive advantage Strategy Financial performance Management Incentives Limited information Additional aspects of valuing an investment: Expectations (a good business isn’t always a good stock) Vast information Macro drivers (interest rates, currencies) Financials and psychological factors Analyzing a Business vs. Analyzing an Investment Both sets of aspects are important in determining whether a stock is a good investment!

  43. Background (Cont.) • What’s the trade-off between risk and return? • Studied by Ibbotson and Sinquefield for the period 1926 – 1988

  44. Historical Risk & Returns of Stocks, Bonds, and T-Bills • Ibbotson and Sinquefield (I&S) examined nominal and real rates of return for seven major classes of assets in the United States • 1. Large-company common stocks • 2. Small-capitalization common stocks • 3. Long-term U.S. government bonds • 4. Long-term corporate bonds • 5. Intermediate-term U.S. Treasury bills • 6. U.S. Treasury bills • 7. Consumer goods (inflation)

  45. Basic Series: Historical Highlights (1926 - 1997) Table 3.6

  46. Derived Series: Historical Highlights (1926 - 1997) • I & S computed geometric and arithmetic mean rates of return • They derived four return premiums • 1. Risk premium • 2. Small-stock premium • 3. Horizon premium • 4. Default premium

  47. Historical Risk/Returns on Alternative Investments Table 3.6 Continued

  48. Derived Series: Historical Highlights (1926 - 1997) • I & S adjusted returns of the series for inflation

  49. Historical Risk/Returns on Alternative Investments Table 3.6 Continued

  50. Returns of Stocks, Bonds, and T-Bills • Returns and risk increase together • Rates of return are generally consistent with the uncertainty of returns

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