Ralph Wanger Ralph Wanger: How Losers Win by Chris Mayer The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, July 19, 2005 Chris Mayer reveals the investment insights of Ralph Wanger. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: During my two hours with Ralph Wanger, he shared the three key investment tactics that propelled his fund to such dazzling gains... --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- HOW LOSERS WIN By Christopher Mayer Ralph Wanger is an expert investor...a true expert. Under his shrewd guidance from 1970–2003, the Acorn Fund (a mutual fund dedicated to small-cap stocks) produced an astounding 17.2% annualized returns. A mere $10,000 investment in 1970 grew to $174,059 by 1998. Last month, I hopped a plane to Chicago to meet with Mr. Wanger for one precious hour. (That's all the time that he had promised to give me). But after the first sixty minutes of our conversation rushed by, he agreed to give me another 60 minutes of his time. That may have been the most valuable gift I have ever received. During my two hours with Ralph Wanger, he shared the three key investment tactics that propelled his fund to such dazzling gains... Investment Insight #1: Stray from the herd every once in a while. Wanger's 1997 book, A Zebra in Lion Country, examines the virtues of staying with smaller, lesser-known companies. The basic metaphor behind Wanger's book is implied in the title. If a zebra hopes to find the best grass – the stuff that is untrodden by the herd – the zebra must selectively stray from the safety of the herd on occasion. Investors must do the same thing...if they are to prosper. One of the ways to "stray," Wanger says, is to think long- term. Because most investors – professionals and individuals alike – think short-term, they often dump the very stocks they should be buying, simply because temporary setbacks cause the share price to drop. The successful investor, therefore, must sometimes take the other side of these panicked sell offs. He must pick up great long-term investments by buying when other investors are dumping them. Short-term thinking dominates the investment world – a fact that Michael Panzner explores in his recent book, The New Laws of the Stock Market Jungle. Panzner notes, for example, that the average holding period for an NYSE stock has fallen to less than one year! As recently as 1990, the average holding period exceeded two years; in 1975, it was over four. "This is why long-term investing ought to work," Wanger said. "If most people are worried about the short term, say, the next quarter or two, then you can exploit that by buying stocks with temporary setbacks but solid longer-term prospects." Ralph Wanger: Why to Buy Leads to When to Sell Investment Insight #2: Know When to Sell If an investor knows exactly why he is buying a given stock, he can also know exactly when to sell the stock. In other words, says Wanger, "Make the reason you buy a stock so specific that you know when the reason is no longer valid." Make the reasons for buying and owning a given stock "falsifiable" or "checkable." That way, you can continuously validate your reasons for owning a stock. If at some point, the reason(s) no longer hold true, sell. Let's say you buy a stock because you believe its profit margins will expand from 5% to 8% over the next three years. Perhaps you have identified a catalyst that is likely to improve profitability. If the company steadily progresses toward 8% margins, you hold on. Your original premise remains valid. But if the company fails to meet your expectations, your original reason for buying the stock is no longer valid. Let's say that after year three, the company's profit margin is only 6%. You were wrong, so you sell. It doesn't matter how well – or poorly - the stock might be performing. Of course, you can revise and revisit your reasoning on a periodic basis. But you must always retain very specific, verifiable reasons for owning each stock in your portfolio. Investment Insight #3: Understand that the Stock Market is a Loser's Game "Chris, if you do NOTHING else in your newsletter," Wanger emphasized, "remind your subscribers every month that the stock market is a loser's game." "Um, okay," I replied, without really understanding what he meant...But I eventually understood. Wanger meant that investment success comes from exploiting the mistakes of others. Charles Ellis' book, Winning the Loser's Game, which Wanger recommended, elaborates the point by examining the game of tennis. There are two types of tennis, Ellis relates, the game played by the professionals and the game played by the amateurs. The professional level is characterized by a great deal of skill and ability. Players hit the ball hard and usually where they want to. It becomes a strategic and tactical battle, as well as an athletic contest. The professionals make very few mistakes. Theirs is a "winner's game." The amateurs, however, play a different game. The amateurs make very few brilliant shots or vollies. They commit many, many "unforced errors," by hitting balls hit out of bounds or into the net. The winner of an amateur tennis game, therefore, is usually the one who makes the fewest mistakes. Amateur tennis is a "loser's game"...and so is investing. The way to win a loser's game is to make fewer mistakes. You play not to lose. So the advice for amateur tennis players is to worry less about powerful serves and focus more on just getting the ball back over the net and in play. Most mutual fund managers don't beat the market. They don't beat the market, because they make many mistakes. They buy and sell too frequently, for example, incurring excessive transaction costs. "To achieve superior or better-than- average results through active management," Ellis writes, "you depend directly on exploiting the mistakes and blunders of others." This means the investors who make the fewest mistakes will be the winners. Investing is not about making explosive gains. It's more about avoiding losses. Investing is a defensive process. The essential task of the investor boils down to an exercise in managing risks. It requires patience and commitment to avoid the temptation of trying to hit home runs every time up. Always think about the possibility of losses and how to limit them. 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: Avoid Losers "The great secret of success in long-term investing," says Wanger, "is to avoid the serious losers." But even if you manage to avoid big losers, it helps to own a winner or two from time to time. So, after bidding Wanger adieu, we took a peek at his latest quarterly reports to find out what he's been buying recently. I am happy to report that three of the names his firm has been buying are stocks that we hold in the portfolio of the Fleet Street Letter: Intrawest (NYSE: IDR), Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste (NYSE: ASR) and Scottish Re (NYSE: SCT). I also discovered that he is buying a few other compelling stocks that are not in the Fleet Street Portfolio...yet. [Ed. Note: Sometimes it can seem that a small group of 'winners' are the ones making all the profits in the investing game. Chris Mayer seeks advice from some of the greatest investors of our time so you can cash in. Join those 'winning the losers game' here: Fleet Street Letter --- Advertisement --- ------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Eric J. Fry Would you believe that the most widely watched inflation index, the consumer price index (CPI), does not measure the increase in the price of housing? According to the National Association of realtors, the price of a house has increased 15% from a year ago. The CPI does not reflect this change. Without getting too technical, the CPI accounts for housing using something called "owner's equivalent rent of primary residence," which is basically an estimate of what an owner would hypothetically have to pay to rent his own house. It is an estimate based on a lot of guesswork and manual adjustments on the part of government statisticians. This owner's equivalent rent is given a 23% weighting in the index. This is a large piece of the index and greatly skews the final result. As Grant's Interest Rate Observer notes, the relatively sluggish rental market has "helped tamp down the measured rate of inflation." While housing prices continue to climb, the CPI barely crawls along at 3.5%. Even so, the CPI, as constructed, has been rising since January 2002, when it was barely above 1%. But what would the CPI look like if you could, in fact, recalculate it using housing prices, instead of imaginary rental equivalents (which is the way it was done prior to the early 1980s, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics adopted the present, convoluted measurement)? Grant's has done the work for us, reporting, "The CPI would be showing year-over-year gains on the order of 5%, rather than 3.5%." This means that all those folks buying 10-year Treasury notes at 4% are under water from the start. 10-year bonds yielding 4% are a bad bet when TRUE inflation is 5%. But buying tangible assets may be a good idea in such an environment. In periods of rising inflation, tangible assets tend to gain value, which is another way of saying that paper money loses its value against tangible assets, especially those tangible assets that throw off increasing amounts of cash. In times of turmoil, most investors instinctively think of gold. But there are other stores of value that also make superior investments. As Warren Buffett pointed out to attendees at this year's Berkshire Hathaway shareholder meeting, "Gold can be a store of value, but so can an acre of land or a barrel of oil..." Or, I would add, so can hotel properties, timberland, hydroelectric dams, and many of the other types of investments that we've recommended in the past. "We'd rather own an asset that will be useful even if the currency drops to 10 cents on the dollar," Buffett concludes. "We wouldn't trade ownership of businesses for a hunk of yellow metal." A hunk of yellow metal may not be a bad thing to own, but we prefer owning tangible assets that produce a return on investment, even when no crisis exists. [Ed. Note: Then again, why buy only a block of land, or only a barrel of oil? Why not capitalize on the new generation of 'super stocks' or Exchange Traded Funds, to diversify your profits. To gain the sort of buying power only investors like Buffet have been able to utilize in the past, click here: The Secret of Super Stocks ------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Thursday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,575 | 10,629 | 284 | -1.9% | S&P | 1,221 | 1,227 | 30 | 0.8% | NASDAQ | 2,145 | 2,153 | 100 | -1.4% | 10-year Treasury | 4.22% | 4.18% | 0.31 | 0.00 | 30-year Treasury | 4.46% | 4.42% | 0.26 | -0.36 | Russell 2000 | 659 | 663 | 30 | 1.1% | Gold | $420.95 | $419.50 | -$19.05 | -3.8% | Silver | $6.99 | $6.90 | -$0.22 | 2.6% | CRB | 306.93 | 309.11 | -4.44 | 8.1% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $57.32 | $57.80 | -$3.22 | 31.9% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.93 | JPY 112.32 | -2.62 | -9.1% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2053 | $1.2085 | 107 | 11.1% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7470 | $1.7560 | 819 | 8.9% |
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