In
the book, Klarman goes out of his way to focus on risk. He notes, “A margin of
safety is achieved when securities are purchased at prices sufficiently below
underlying value to allow for human error, bad luck, or extreme volatility in a
complex, unpredictable and rapidly changing world."
Klarman
goes on to discuss several methodologies for examining what the true value of a
company is versus the perception of
its value as portrayed by its stock price. He mentions many methods for
evaluating the “real” value of a
company -- practices which can be executed by most undergraduate-level finance students.
Klarman knew that his formulas and assumptions could be perfect, but unless
perception (stock price) and reality merged, he would not make money. The gap
needed to be wide enough to account for uncertainties and peoples’ perceptions needed to change.
While
this all seems dull and mathematical so far, great investors like Klarman,
Buffet, and Soros are acutely aware that current circumstances and the corresponding investor behavior they
elicit is what leads to any disconnect between the market price and the true
value of each of their holdings. They
believe that the ideal circumstance for identifying the widest gap (best margin
of safety) is when the fewest number of people agree with them. This
happens when the behavior of other investors is contrary to their own. Great
investors also know that extreme behavior is not permanent behavior. Attitudes
can change more rapidly than fundamentals and money can be made anticipating
these attitudinal shifts. Money can be made buying companies (or industries, or
markets) with the highest “behavioral” margin of safety. Capital can be
protected by avoiding (or shorting) those with the lowest behavioral margin of
safety (crowded trades).
What is
also quite clear to us is that the longer an investment behavior persists (e.g.
buying bonds, selling energy stocks, buying large cap growth stocks, etc.) the
greater the likelihood that this behavior will sow the seeds to its own
reversal. At these "behavioral inflection points" the selling will dissipate and turn into buying and the buying into
selling. Said differently, the stocks (or bonds, commodities, real estate) with
the lowest behavioral margin of safety are those that have already gone up the most for the longest period of
time.
When I
think of recent history, I think of the stock of Apple. In September of 2012 the
stock eclipsed $700 per share. Since October of ‘08 Apple ascended to that
level in a mesmerizing fashion growing at an annual rate of more than 60%. Few
managers who expected to beat their benchmarks could afford to be left out of
this stock. At $700 per share there was still a cogent argument as to why the
stock had a fundamental margin of
safety. Excluding the over $120 of cash per
share the company had on its balance sheet,
Apple was still trading at under 12 times its forecasted earnings. This
was cheaper than many slower growing, lower quality companies in the S&P
500. But how high was its behavioral
margin of safety? Did everybody who was
going to buy it already own it?
While this
practice is difficult to quantify, I would hazard to guess that the behavioral
margin of safety was not high for this investment. According to Nick Murray
Interactive, Apple was one of the top ten holdings in over seven hundred equity
mutual funds; four hundred had it as their single largest holding. 400 mutual
funds quantitatively demonstrated that this was the single stock that was going
to help them the most in beating the market averages over the foreseeable
future after it had already gone up
more than just about any other stock over the previous four years. It takes some courage to own any single
company. With Apple it took a great deal more courage not to own it. I have no
idea how this company will perform from current levels ($500 per share a/o
1/2012) but Nick Murray said it best when he commented, “We may no longer be
willing to accept even excellence from Apple, because we have in some sense
started pricing in magic.”
The
behavioral margin of safety for the stocks in general can vary over time. As we
enter 2013 stocks have recovered over 100% from their lows in March of
2009. One would think that the average
investor increasingly participating is one of the reasons for this recovery. This is not the case. According to Gallup, every year since the recovery began
the “participation rate” of American household in stocks has declined. The
participation rate sits at 54%, the lowest level since Gallup started measuring
the data in 1999. Everybody who can own stocks clearly does not own stocks.
Every dollar that could come into the stock market has yet to be committed. We
would need to see more investors behaving
with impunity before waving the caution flag to our loyal constituency.