Monday 9 December 2013

Warren Buffett market-beating skills revealed - A Bloomberg Businessweek article

As it turns out,surprise surprise (not), investing in quality companies is the way to go. See below for a Bloomberg Businessweek article which touches on research done by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The article nonetheless over-simplifies the Warren Buffett's approach, where it alludes that he buys cheap companies, and that a low P/B is taken to be cheap. A low P/B is a good starting point but is not the be all that ends all as there are multiple other factors to consider.

Plus, there is a slight technical issue here - how low should P/B be to be considered cheap? Whether it is cheap or not requires a yardstick to measure against and that yardstick should be in the form of a company's intrinsic value.

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http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-12-05/warren-buffett-market-beating-skills-revealed-cutting-research

Warren Buffett isn’t just a great investor. He’s the best investor, an economic study has found.
An index measuring returns adjusted by price fluctuations shows the billionaire chairman and chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (A:US) has done better than every long-lived U.S. stock and mutual fund.

Looking at all U.S. stocks from 1926 to 2011 that have been traded for more than 30 years, a paper published this week by the National Bureau of Economic Research calculated that Buffett’s so-called Sharpe ratio is 0.76 since 1976. That was about twice the stock market’s 0.39.

The ratio is also larger than all 196 U.S. mutual funds that have been around for 30 years. The median Sharpe ratio for them is 0.37.

The review of Buffett’s investments concluded he has been rewarded for his use of leverage, coupled with a focus on cheap, safe, quality shares.

The study said Buffett is willing to take on borrowing to finance investment, then picks stocks that have low volatility, are cheap -- with low price-to-book ratios -- and are high quality, meaning they are profitable and have high payouts.

By breaking down Berkshire Hathaway’s portfolio into ownership of publicly traded stocks versus wholly owned private companies, the authors also found the tradable equities performed best. That suggested to them that Buffett’s returns are due more to stock selection than to the pressure he puts on companies he has stakes in to improve their management.

“Buffett’s performance appears not to be luck, but an expression that value and quality investing can be implemented,” said Andrea Frazzini and David Kabiller of AQR Capital Management LLC and Lasse H. Pedersen of Copenhagen Business School. “If you travel back in time and pick one stock in 1976, Berkshire would be your pick.”

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