There are two times in a man’s life when he should not speculate: when he can’t afford it and when he can.
– Mark Twain

Looks like Mark Twain’s fellow Americans routinely ignore his advice. And that sets them apart. Just a decade ago they invested in dot.com companies hoping that it is the next big thing to get rich quick.

And their speculation in the housing market in the recent past (that real estate prices will forever go up), is known all too well. Now all of us (including the Americans) speculate as to when the world economy will start looking up again or whether we have seen the bottom of it or not.

businessoverbreakfast

But as is always their wont, we notice that no matter how deep they dig themselves in to a hole, Americans don’t just sit around and brood over their misfortune. Instead they find a way to claw their way up.

They actively search for alternatives and pursue the best option as their counsel or wisdom dictates. They would do it even if it means assuming further risks to their careers or financial standing or gaining expertise in a hitherto unknown but promising field.

A case in point is an article titled ‘The New Internet Start-Up Boom: Get Rich Slow‘ that appeared in the Time magazine last week.

It caught my attention for two phrases in the title:

  1. The New Internet Start-Up Boom
  2. Get Rich Slow

‘Getting rich slow’ is something new to them and given their bad experience with the Internet Start-Ups they should think twice going that way. More importantly, investing in any business in these difficult times will be perceived as risky by the rest of us, the ‘normal’ guys. But they are not normal.

So I said to my friend, “We must give credit to the Americans for one thing. They always find a way to salvage a situation if not finding a way to come out on top”

Before I could finish, he cut me short, “When you say Americans, do you mean Whites, Blacks, Hispanic, Asian Americans, or Native Indians?”

Then he continued, “I don’t think it is right to generalize and say all Americans are resourceful and entrepreneurial. Those are traits that we find in individuals and they can be anywhere.”

Maybe he has a point. But I still think U.S.A as a whole is more entrepreneurial (by that I mean being creative, solving problems, taking risks) than say a country like France.

Now coming back to the question posed in the title of this post, it appears that any time is a good time to start a business provided we are not guided just by our passion or intuition alone but realize that a would be entrepreneur needs adequate coaching.

It’s good to remind ourselves that we are bound to fail whenever we undertake something new. Something we haven’t done before in our life.

Imagine a toddler attempting to stand for the first time or trying to walk for that matter. If we had observed we would have noticed the number of times it attempts to stand and fall on its back.

“Ouch! That must be hurting”, we say to ourselves. And we don’t discourage the toddler as to not attempt such ‘foolish’ things in its life. We know with a little help, it not only stands on its own feet and soon runs ahead of us.

If are an American you know this intuitively and the rest of us stand inspired by you.

God bless America.

One (Poor Dad) believed, “Our home is our largest investment and our greatest asset.” The other (Rich Dad) believed, “My house is a liability, and if your house is your largest investment, you’re in trouble.” – From the book Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert T. Kiyosaki

houseatwhatcostTwo articles last week: one worries whether how long the free fall of home prices to continue and the other worries what if they don’t bounce back after hitting the bottom. Both made me wonder if home ownership is not such a good thing after all. That house is not an asset, and is in fact a liability. Through fall in valuation, interest on mortgage, property taxes, maintenance expenses, depreciation we pay month after month. It drains our cash flow in all the years of ownership. It precludes us from looking for other, better investment opportunities. It neither rewards us financially nor emotionally.

I couldn’t agree more with the author of this book when he says for most people buying a nice home is an emotional thing and I can also vouch for it from personal experience. I put all my savings and took on some debt to buy my spanking new apartment when I was young. Subsequently I had to let go of so many better investment opportunities as well as sacrificing even some simple pleasures of life like taking vacations, going for movies, etc just so I can service this debt and give myself the emotional high of home ownership. I even skimped on clothes to save a few dollars.

What is worse, you may not believe this, pursuing my career, I moved from city to city and never once, (I repeat, not even once) did I get an opportunity to sleep in my own apartment. As soon as the apartment was finished and the builder handed over the keys to me, I gave them to my new tenant collecting the rental deposit, and off I was on my way. I thought to myself, while I am paying the mortgage, the tenant builds up part of my home equity month after month. I patted myself on being such a genius.


I never took into consideration the risks involved:

  1. What if my tenant doesn’t pay the rent just for a month?
  2. Or skips paying rent for months in a row and vacates without notice?
  3. While vacating, if he does any damage to the property, how much would it to cost to fix?
  4. Or worse still what if he refuses to pay and refuses to vacate either?
  5. What would be the legal costs of vacating the errant tenant?
  6. And how long would it take?

Luckily for me no such thing happened. And I got out of this debt by selling my apartment in the boom time at nearly 4 times the price I bought. Still the real price I paid in terms of missed opportunities, and the enormous stress I underwent month after month paying my mortgage wouldn’t compare for the fleeting pride of home ownership.

Just having bought once only and sold it a few years later doesn’t qualify me as a real estate consultant. However believe me this one experience of having bought and sold a piece of real estate will stand me a lifetime. I believe I am qualified to ask you a few questions:

  • While it is reasonable to expect to have a roof over our heads, do you really have to own the roof?
  • If you decide to own your house are you willing to take on a mortgage for the next 30 years? I remember in one of the episodes (Office Olympics, Season2, Episode3 of the TV Sitcom Office(US)) when Michael buys his condo his assistant Dwight Schrute reminds us that Michael is really buying an expensive coffin.
  • Are you willing to stay tied to your house and let go of other lucrative investment opportunities.
  • Or are you willing to let go of many brilliant career moves that may be rewarding many times over in the long run just because you can’t move out of your house or city.
  • If after all this you decide to own it, should it really be new? Can’t you settle for an old or refurbished house in a good neighborhood that comes at a bargain or throwaway price?

When someone buys a house for just $101/- at an auction (as the second article says), then the price is right for me.

This week I read two articles in Newsweek. While both are related in some way, one rejected outright the need for management education; the other was more subtle in stating that we are better off without it. I was so fired up after reading them, I had to stop everything else to write and finish this post in one shot. Continue reading »

A few months ago I sold a computer memory module to an octogenarian and promised him that the product carries a lifetime warranty. I assured him that should it fail, he can always come to our store and exchange it for another. To this the man in his eighties replied with a smile, “Whose life are you talking about here?” Is it his life, the product’s life, or the store’s life?

While at that time we enjoyed it as a joke, I couldn’t help think of it when AIG was on the brink of failure this week. When an insurance company offers life insurance the prospective client rarely think of the company’s life. We take it for granted and go about paying premiums religiously month after month. And remember AIG was targeting aged customers with no medical, guaranteed acceptance.

Continue reading »

Up front I must be honest with you. While the rest of this article is mine, the title of this post belongs to my friend and colleague at my office. While we were discussing about corporate scandals, he said that he cannot state with any level of certainty that God exists. But he knew for sure that evil starts with complacency. 

Reflecting on what he said about corporate scandals I tend to agree with him. Today we have reached a situation where we treat the venerable financial statements as myths and start to wonder how much of them are true.


At any of the following stages in the evolution of a corporate scandal, person or persons involved could have blown the whistle and let the investing public and authorities concerned know that something is amiss and needs some review/investigation.
But they prefer to remain complacent and do nothing.

Stages of corporate downfall:

  1. Idea being conceived in the brain storming sessions of corporate ‘smarts’ (Example: Morgan Chase thought of offloading the risk from their balance sheet to banks as assets or Enron conceived the idea of selling Energy as a commodity)
  2. Plan executed with finesse in total secrecy and promoted as the next big thing.
  3. Investors being led to believe that it is a now or never opportunity. ( Example: banks/insurance companies/pension funds vie with each other to carry the risk offloaded by investment banks as assets on their balance sheets)
  4. Top executives show spectacular results from quarter to quarter and award themselves impressive cash bonuses or stock options in so far the going is good.
  5. Employees tend to believe and go with whatever good news management doles out to them. They show their enthusiasm by enhancing their contribution to the 401(K) plans
  6. Auditors (both internal and external) certify that to the ‘best of their knowledge’ the statements presented to them are true and accurate. (Arthur Andersen did an excellent job in certifying Enron’s financial statements. I wonder who the auditors of Nortel Networks were. Thanks to them restating of financial statements became fashionable.)
  7. News media/ investment analysts gobble up stories presented by the management of such ‘excellent’ companies and award ranks for ‘performance’. (One notable exception being the story ‘how exactly Enron gets its revenue? in Fortune Magazine.
  8. A year or two goes by and then word slowly gets around that things are not as rosy as they are painted out to be. Top executives manage to get themselves fired with excellent severance pay.
  9. Stock prices nose dive. Since the top executives have already been safely bailed out, it is now time for the government to work out the bail out details of the corporation.
  10. Finally employees and investing public are left holding the bag not knowing what to do next.



I am sure in any of the above stages there are a few honest souls with a troubled conscience who would only be too relieved to blow the whistle. But they would have been restrained from doing so for fear of consequences.

I think in the Internet age it is not difficult to post anonymously about things going wrong in the corporate world. Even if this is considered to be too risky, they can give notice about failing entities in a circuitous (hush-hush) fashion giving appropriate clues for the readers to solve the puzzle.

My sincere request for the people ‘in the know’ is to speak up before it is too late.

Recently I read an article about ethical investing titled Investing with a conscience‘ and was put to some serious introspection. Where would I draw the line? Will I be only concerned with the bottom line or will I give credit for corporate social responsibility. The author raises issues about investing in companies like Tim Hortons and McDonalds, hinting that they are to some extent responsible for obesity in North America. But I have a clear conscience when it comes to investing in such companies and I would gladly invest if I have the money. In my opinion they are excellent companies innovative in being productive and also giving products that we find refreshing. Investment Guru Peter Lynch used to say, “If you like a company’s products, chances are you will love the companies (as investors) too” If someone loves their products so much that they go into excess eating them and become obese it is not the companies’ fault.

With regard to companies that pollute the environment (Nuclear Power Generation), or those involved in deforestation (paper mills, bio-fuels) I believe society at large is responsible for their existence. It is unfair or unwise to put in bad light an otherwise productive entity that provides much needed necessities of life by withholding our investments. As our needs change or technology evolves such industries die a natural death. Until such time through legislation and incentives we can limit the damage and clear our conscience as investors. So for me these companies are a go.

Next in rank come companies that do businesses in countries with oppressive regimes where human rights abuse is rampant or companies knowingly exploit child labor to show an impressive bottom line. To be frank with you I grudgingly permit myself to be an investor in companies doing business in countries with oppressive regimes for the simple reason, it will improve awareness in the public even under such dictatorship. Because of our moral/ethical standards if we shun them, it would only help isolate them further and their plight would be even more miserable. Sherrit Canada doing business in Cuba is a case in point, whose shares have appreciated in recent times soon after Fidel Castro stepped down paving way for a supposedly more liberal leadership.

Nike accused of child labor in developing countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh is in some measure contributing to the development of the local community in those countries. Some argue what happens to the innocent children whose future/ innocence is lost in the factories? For them my counter question is can you send a child to school on an empty stomach? While it may or may not be true that parents willingly send their children to toil in factories, but do the opponents of child labor have any alternatives? To me a child laborer is any day better than a child soldier which he may tend to become if no alternatives are provided.

That reminds me about investing in companies in the armaments production, particularly those that produce land mines and chemical and biological weapons. The author makes us think that they are the only things that kill or maim innocent public and suggest we may shy away from investing in them. What about aircraft carrying out carpet bombing or ballistic missiles armed with nuclear weapons? Are they benign? To me these are necessary evils that we have to live with and my excuse for investing such in companies is that these weapons can be used as effective deterrents.

So finally what kinds of companies do I avoid investing in? It is the companies whose products are a definite health hazard like those in the tobacco industry or companies investing in casinos that willingly make the public morally and literally bankrupt. No matter what be their justification, I find them to be lacking at best and loathing at its worst.

I haven’t covered some emerging industries like those doing pioneering research in stem cells and theirpromises to cure human ailments. Due to changed social awareness assume a private company in stem cell research invents a breakthrough process for human cloning. If it goes public, will I invest in that? I don’t know. Ask my clone, ‘may be definitely’ he has the answer.

A little while ago in my previous entry I mentioned that I sit on the fence when it comes to Fundamental or Technical Analysis of stocks and couldn’t decide which way to go. But there is a part of Fundamental Analysis viz. Qualitative Analysis that appeals to me over its other part Quantitative Analysis.

Qualitative analysis makes me immune from my (un)founded fear of cooked up figures (if any) and the uneasy feeling of making decisions based purely on charts(Technical Analysis). There are several factors that must be taken into account like the business model, competitive advantage, management, corporate governance while making a comprehensive qualitative analysis.

While it is not possible to go into all of these factors in this forum, I would like you to give some thought to just one i.e. competitive advantage that any of your current and proposed investments enjoy. Why because, if a company enjoys immense competitive advantage, it can get away with a few dumb moves that it makes in the short term, learn from its mistakes, do some course corrections, survive in the long run and eventually subdue its competition. At least it will help you decide if should buy, hold or unload your stocks.

I would like to elaborate with a real life example that you are most likely familiar with and hence can see my point of view. I am sure all of you who are reading this blog have access to at least one (or several) notebooks or personal computers as otherwise you would not be reading this blog. And I think you are aware that there is a mass storage device ( hard disk drive) in your notebook or PC that stores all your applications and data.

There are several manufacturers who make these hard disk drives, out of these there is one company that I would like to quote as an example: Seagate Technology( Stock symbol US: STX) which is the biggest manufacturer of hard disk drives and nearly twice as big as its nearest rival. My recommendation of Seagate comes to you not as an investor but as a seller and as well as a consumer of Seagate Hard Drives.

As a seller of Seagate hard drives, only rarely do I see a hard drive fail under warranty. Even for such failure, I get excellent after sales service from Seagate and thus could keep my customers happy. I mean within a day or two of shipping the defective hard drive, I get an email confirmation from Seagate that they have received the hard drive and are working on it. And within a week I get a replacement to give it to my customer.

As a consumer I can vouch that none of the Seagate hard drives running in my three PCs has ever failed on me, four of them running as long as 5 years without any problems.

Given their quality, reliability and after sales service, I can infer that they have excellent procedures in place. But their operational effectiveness is not the same as the competitive advantage they enjoy. As this article clarifies

Operational Effectiveness means a company is better than rivals at similar activities while competitive advantage means by doing different activities or performing similar activities in different ways.

Discussing competitive advantage within the context of Seagate Technology, thanks to Michael E. Porter we have a model that defines the existence of Seagate in data storage industry.

  1. Competition in the industry ( Seagate is a leader)
  2. Potential of new entrants into industry ( See barriers to entry below)
  3. Power of suppliers ( could not think of any)
  4. Power of consumers ( Seagate is not at the mercy of any particular group of consumers as it enjoys a very wide consumer base )
  5. Threat of substitute products ( There could be a real threat from Solid State Drives (SSDs) that are emerging in the data storage market with better features to offer. Though currently Seagate enjoys a price advantage vs. SSDs that it can offer to its consumers , Solid State Drives may eventually take over. Unless Seagate is taking to this new technology it is likely to loose its dominance)

Barriers to entry:

Before I wrap up, I would like you to see what barriers to entry (again there are many, but to name just a few) that Seagate enjoys

  • High Startup costs ( To design, manufacture and distribute (worldwide) millions of hard disk drives with such complex technology entails high startup costs and hence a new entrant has to think twice before committing)
  • Strong brand identity ( Though as a consumer if you buy a brand name PC you may not be aware of the hard drive inside it, the decision is made for you already. But if you buy a custom built PC or if you build a PC yourself you are more likely to specify a Seagate hard drive.)
  • Strong customer loyalty ( Though Seagate HD is little bit more expensive, it has a market dominance)
  • High switching costs ( This is where it enjoys a great advantage. Once a hard drive, Seagate or any other, is up and running, no one wants to replace it with another make, even if the latter comes free of cost. The hassle of installation, transfer of contents from one to another and the inevitable downtime this requires will not make it worthwhile)

Finally can you sleep peacefully if you have a suspicion that your hard drive may fail anytime taking all your valuable data with it?

I can’t.

Today’s news: gold surges past a record $900 an ounce. In today’s market, everything else with a tangible, marketable value has plunged: real estate, shares, currency, automobiles, computer products etc. The exception is oil which is rightly (?) termed as ‘black gold’. It is understandable that, so much of our life is dependent on oil that it appreciates, while all other assets with which we pay for it depreciate. They say a day may come when we may have to pay for black gold (oil) with gold. But why gold?

goldcoins

Is it because real gold can be minted into coins, and is convenient (?) to carry and exchange as a medium of currency? One can argue, because only so much of it is there, it will always retain its value or appreciate with increasing demand.

But it is hard to imagine that I will be handing over a bag of gold coins to fill up my gas tank. We are so used to the convenience of swiping a card at the cash counter, or typing in our credit card number while buying something off the Internet, that it is almost impossible to reverse the process.

When I was young I used to think what madness is this that we are so obsessed with possessing this ‘precious’ metal. It is after all a metal that we assign value to.

Sure enough it possesses superior chemical and electrical properties, which we could demonstrate time and time again in laboratories and real life applications, so can be assigned some utility value. But I could not see any reason for assigning a lofty economic(investment) value to it.

One may say because of its rarity. Because of its rarity if it appreciates too much in value, science and technology can always find some alternatives to its use or limits its use to a bare minimum.

I could hear someone saying reasons are historical and we follow the tradition. Even the early church could not shy away from stashing gold. Just look at what the Pope the Innocent IV said to Thomas Aquinas, “We cannot say as St. Peter of old, ‘Silver and gold have I none’ pointing to an abundant mass of treasure poured out in his presence.

They may argue with great vigor, “Why would God in his wisdom lavish all his disciples with gold and silver who profess greater faith in them than in Himself?” Can’t you see an apparent contradiction here?

My simple reason for not backing Gold is this: Gold is limited in supply while Life in all its form is abundant and is always for growth.

And I am for life.

Aquinas was wise in his reply to the pope, “Neither can you command, as did he (St. Peter), the lame man to arise and walk.”

“To be or not to be, that is the question;

Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer

The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,…..”

Hamlet ponders in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark.

Well that may not be question that modern day Shakespeare would have had Hamlet to contemplate. He would rather have him philosophize on the merits of investing in stocks using either of the two approaches: Fundamental or Technical analysis of stocks in the investing public’s search for outrageous fortune.

I am sure Hamlet would be equally lost in this dilemma.

For one thing Hamlet was indecisive like many of us are and his uncertainty of knowledge is all the more applicable to most of us. To quote Peter Lynch in one of his books “Beating the Street”, “It is often what you know that can hurt you” or words to that effect. Such being the case, how can I discount what I don’t know?

Consider what he says on page 39 of this book , ” … we are confronted with the latest reasons that mankind is doomed; global warming, global cooling, the evil Soviet empire, the collapse of the evil Soviet empire, recession, inflation, illiteracy, the high cost of health care, fundamentalist Muslims, the budget deficit, the brain drain, tribal warfare, organized crime, disorganized crime, sex scandals, money scandals, sex and money scandals. Even the sports page can make you sick.”

Remember this book was published in 1993! and you can see many of the reasons still hold good today. Enough reasons for me to hold to my little cash.

For who can claim that they have 100% information on an investment proposal. The collapse of Long Term Capital Management in the not too distant past is still in memory. The Nobel laureate economists, physicists behind Long Term Capital claimed that they have figured out a rocket science formula for investment in bonds that is foolproof. Sure enough Long Term Capital gave phenomenal returns in the first three years of its foundation: 20 percent in 1994, 43 percent in 1995, and 41 percent in 1996! But its collapse in 1998 was even more dramatic: Long Term Capital’s equity stood at $4.1 billion on 1 August, $2.3 billion on 1 September, and $600 million by 21 September–90 percent of its equity was wiped out in just 55 days. (You may want to see this article for more information on this: Up like a rocket).

We don’t know how much more our venerable financial institutions will write down citing subprime market meltdown in the recent past.

When stalwarts stumble, it is no wonder novices like me may crumble. So I stand on the beach testing the waters; weighing endlessly the merits and demerits of Fundamental or Technical analysis of stocks.

May be one day I will take the plunge. Till that day arrives, I will deliberate like Hamlet, “Fundamental or Technical, that is the question”