Ralph Wanger Ralph Wanger: Low-Cut Dresses and Ugly Ducklings by James Boric The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, July 13, 2005 James Boric discusses Ralph Wanger's theory of small-cap investing: Don;t go after the popular one everyone's swarming around, go for the ugly ducklings . . . -------------------------
The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Making money in the small-cap market is like finding a woman, you just have to know the right places to look... --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- LOW CUT DRESSES AND UGLY DUCKLINGS By James Boric Making money in the small-cap market is like finding a woman. If you are only looking to get laid, you'll head down to the smoke-filled tavern and seek out the woman with the low-cut dress, cheap perfume and a nearly empty drink. Buy her enough rum and Cokes and you may find the immediate satisfaction you desire. (Of course, God only knows what you may come down with in the process.) But if you are looking for a wife, a life-long companion, you'll pick the woman that has morals, integrity and a friendly smile. Instead of scouring the seamy bars and nightclubs, you have to look in far more boring places – like the local library, the neighborhood coffee bar or your corner grocery store. That's the basic metaphor Ralph Wanger, the finest small- cap fund manager of the last 50 years, used to describe investors last Tuesday when Chris Mayer and I flew to Chicago to interview him. We met at 227 West Monroe Street at 11:00 sharp. Both of us were giddy with excitement. Wanger is to the small-cap market as Buffett is to value investing. There is no one better – and we were about to meet him. From 1970 to 2003 Wanger ran and managed the Acorn Fund – a small-cap fund that invests in fundamentally sound companies that the rest of Wall Street turned their noses to. During his tenure at Acorn, he averaged a robust 17.2% return. A mere $10,000 investment in 1970 was worth $174,059 by 1998. Not too shabby. And when Chris said he was able to get an interview with him, I wasn't going to pass up the opportunity to pick his brain. Ralph Wanger: What Separates the Successful from the Unsuccessful After clearing security, taking two elevators up to Mr. Wanger's 30th floor at office (that overlooked the Chicago skyline and Lake Michigan), and introducing ourselves, I asked Wanger what separates successful small-cap investors from those who lose their shirts. He put it to me like this... Small-cap speculators (those who tend to lose a ton of money in the market) buy the hottest biotech or semiconductor stocks hoping to make a quick return. They seek out the sexiest stories on Wall Street – the stories everyone is talking about-- and lay their money down. If they are lucky, they walk away with a bundle of cash. But more than not, they come up empty and wishing they wouldn't have indulged in the first place. Wanger referred to these people as "loony." They are the same people who go to the bar looking for the one night stand with the girl that is being swarmed with dozens of drunk men. Their chances of winning are slim to none. Yet most people who dabble in the small-cap market take this approach. The more prudent way to make money in the small-cap market, Wanger contends, is to focus on the boring and beaten down companies that no one else is looking at. And that's exactly how he averaged a 17.2% compounded return for 30 years as the fund manager for the Acorn Small Cap Fund. Some of his biggest winners (which he proudly shared with Chris and I) were a brick maker, a slot machine business and a "boring" frying machine company. If those companies were women, they would be buried in the back of a library, wearing a turtleneck and a cardigan sweater reading the latest edition of Home and Garden. At first glance, they may be what you or I would consider an ugly duckling. But Wanger loves his ugly ducklings. As he said in his classic book A Zebra in Lion Country"... "My favorite ugly duckling stock is Newell Industries. It's in the most mundane business you could imagine. It makes frying pans, knitting needles, curtain rods and drapery hooks, paint rollers, a whole catalog of routine hardware and home decorating items. We're not dealing with integrated circuits here." Wanger bought shares of Newell for as little as $1.68 a share in the mid 1980s when no one else was paying attention. But thanks to deals with Home Depot and Wal Mart, business boomed for little hardware company. And the stock rose as high as $52 a share. That's a 30-bagger win. Impressive – the stuff legends are made of. But most small- cap investors won't ever see those kinds of gains. And it's not because they aren't smart enough. It's because they aren't disciplined enough. Ralph Wanger: Ugly Ducklings vs. Sexy Vixens To truly make money in the small-cap market you have to be willing to invest – not speculate. You have to be willing to look at the ugly ducklings versus the sexy vixens that everyone is watching. And you have to hold solid companies for a long time so your gains can compound. Wanger's average holding period for was between four and five years. But as he was quick to point out to Chris and I, he held onto some winners for decades while he cut others loose after a few months. This is key. What separates a great investor like Wanger from a schmuck who loses money every year may be one or two investments over the span of several years. You may only have one, two or three grand slams in a career – those 30 baggers that you can write books about. And the guy who can walk away with three 30-baggers versus one will come out WAY ahead in the end. That's exactly what Wanger has done year in and year out. He let his winners compound (a la Newell) and he cuts his losers. The net result has been a 17.2% compounded return for his famed Acorn fund. So how can you achieve similar results? You have to know when to sell – something most investors don't have a clue about. Wanger said your sell strategy is actually built-in to your buy decision. Unlike most amateur investors, he doesn't necessarily use stop-losses or trailing stops to figure out when to exit a position. Instead, he creates a simple spreadsheet for each investment he makes. He writes (in plain, simple English) why he is buying stock in a company. In other words, he spells out his buy decision. But he also makes it easy to figure out when to sell. When his reason for buying is proven false, he sells. Here's the example he shared with us... Let's say you buy shares of XYZ Corp. because you believe its profit margins will rise from 2% to 8% over the next five years. That's your investment strategy. It's simple...to the point...and falsifiable. There are only three possible scenarios that could cause you to sell. Sell Scenario #1: If after several years the profit margins haven't budged, you sell. Your investment idea – thinking the company's profit margins would rise – is false. Time to lick your wounds and move on. You were wrong. Sell Scenario #2: If after two years XYZ Corp.'s profit margins were at 5%, you would continue to hold. The margins are rising. Your initial investment equation is still true. So there's no reason to take profit yet – a mistake most investors make. Hold this baby...it could make you famous. Sell Scenario #3: If XYZ Corp.'s profit margins are at 9%, you would also sell. Once again, your initial reason for buying the company is false. The company's margins rose above 8%. Time to take profits and sell. The company has exceeded your expectations. Congrats. Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
Ralph Wanger: Why You Buy It's a simple strategy – one I suggest you use in your own investing. Every time you buy a stock, write down why you are buying it. Keep it short -- no more than a paragraph or two. Make sure the reason you are buying is simple and clearly laid out. And when the reason you bought the stock is no longer true, sell. This will save you a lot of sleepless nights, costly transaction costs and wild price flucutations that scare most other investors. In the short term, even the best of small-cap stocks are subject to a lot of ups and downs. And the worst thing in the world is to sell a solid company just because the price went down. That's what speculators do. And you know you can't make a lot of money being a small-cap speculator. Wanger built his fortune by investing in boring (ugly duckling) stocks. He kept his buy and sell strategies simple. And like a good woman, he held onto solid companies for a long, long time. If you aren't willing to do the same, you should stay away from the small-cap market now. With valuations neutral at best, your chances of getting lucky aren't very good. Chances are, you'll end up sleeping alone and have less money in your bank account than your had the day before... [Ed. Note: James Boric is a frequent contributor to Penny Sleuth, a free e-letter dedicate to delivering the most astute and insightful news from the exciting small-cap world. Learn more about the market's possibilities here: The Small-Cap World of Profits --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud A guaranteed investment scheme... You and I buy up all the nickels we can get our hands on. Since the underlying metal in a nickel today is worth about six cents, we lock ourselves in at a guaranteed 20% profit by selling short the coin's metal in the financial markets today. Then all we need to do is melt down the nickels... Okay, so it's not so easy. And there's probably some sort of law against this. But the reality is, at current metals prices, it costs the U.S. government about six cents to produce a nickel... Leave it to the U.S. government to LOSE money by PRINTING money... In fiscal year 2003 (ending in September), it cost the U.S. government 3.78 cents to produce a nickel. In fiscal year 2004, it cost the government 4.56 cents to produce a nickel. And so far this fiscal year (from October 1, 2004 to present), the price of copper (which is the most prevalent metal in a nickel) is well above its fiscal year 2004 levels, meaning that it'll likely cost the government about 6 cents to produce a nickel. Take a look: The penny is in the same boat as the nickel. Again, leave it to our government to lose money in something that should be enormously profitable. After all, the government can print as many dollar bills as it wants... simply by printing the paper. How can you LOSE money when you MAKE the money? Of course, the government will not lose this game... The government will eventually be the one to earn the profit on the melt value of the coins as it takes them out of circulation. And no doubt, the government will soon change the metal content of the nickel and the penny, debasing the intrinsic value of the coins, as governments have done for centuries. (At the amazing rate of the destruction of the value of a dollar, chances are we'll be spending plastic poker chips instead of metal coins in the not too distant future.) So what's the right thing to do? It's not to bury a mountain of pennies and nickels in your backyard. And commandeering a fleet of trucks to collect nickels and melt them for their metal content seems pretty extreme, and will probably run afoul of government laws somewhere along the way. THE RIGHT THING TO DO IS SIMPLY TO HAVE LESS PAPER, AND MORE METAL, IN YOUR ASSETS. The government can debase money. But it can't mess with your metal. Two years ago, a nickel cost less than 4 cents to produce. Last year, a nickel cost almost 5 cents to produce. And this year, a nickel will likely cost the government 6 cents to produce. The reality is, our paper dollars become more and more worthless every day. Based on the government's own inflation statistics (the CPI), the dollar has already lost 80% of its purchasing power just since 1970. Said another way, what cost $2 in 1970 now costs $10 today. (See for yourself: http://www.westegg.com/inflation/ ) They say "a nickel ain't worth a dime anymore" and it's true. A nickel back in 1970 is actually worth 25 cents... a quarter... today. The more I look for "no-brainer" assets, the more I'm drawn to metals / commodity plays, including gold. While every other asset out there (stocks, bonds, and real estate) has appreciated dramatically over the last 25 years, commodities, and gold in particular, have gotten cheaper and cheaper. Adjusted for inflation, gold is unbelievably cheap. Commodity plays, even though they have risen, are still worth owning. At the very least, I feel that you must own some of my recommended commodities and gold plays, simply to hedge your risk of the hidden loss in value every year of owning paper assets... [Ed. note: Dr. Steve Sjuggerud is the slightly eccentric, though highly perceptive, editor behind the True Wealth newsletter. What others dismiss – or perhaps don't even notice in the first place – Steve turns into profit-making opportunities. For a different kind of thinker click here: Dr. Sjuggerud's True Wealth ------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Thursday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,514 | 10,520 | 223 | -2.5% | S&P | 1,222 | 1,219 | 32 | 0.8% | NASDAQ | 2,143 | 2,135 | 98 | -1.5% | 10-year Treasury | 4.14% | 4.10% | 0.23 | -0.07 | 30-year Treasury | 4.38% | 4.34% | 0.18 | -0.44 | Russell 2000 | 671 | 672 | 42 | 2.9% | Gold | $427.25 | $426.05 | -$12.75 | -2.4% | Silver | $7.07 | $7.10 | -$0.14 | 3.7% | CRB | 311.68 | 308.90 | 0.31 | 9.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $60.62 | $58.92 | $0.08 | 39.5% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 110.88 | JPY 111.82 | -1.57 | -8.1% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2243 | $1.2068 | -83 | 9.7% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7783 | $1.7567 | 506 | 7.3% |
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