A great company at a fair price’
Nobody really knows the specific
principles that Warren Buffett applies when deciding
the price he will pay for a share investment. We do
know that he has said on several occasions that it is
better to buy a ‘great company at a fair price than
a fair company at a great price’.
This tends to agree with the view of
Benjamin Graham who often referred to primary and
secondary stocks. He believed that, although paying
too high a price for any stock was foolish, the risk
was higher when the stock was of secondary grade.
Patience
The other thing that Warren Buffett
counsels, when deciding on investment purchases, is
patience. He has said that he is prepared to wait
forever to buy a stock at the right price.
There is a seeming disparity
of views between Graham and Buffett on
diversification. Benjamin Graham was a firm believer,
even in relation to stock purchases at bargain prices,
in spreading the risk over a number of share
investments. Warren Buffett, on the other hand,
appears to take a different view: concentrate on just
a few stocks.
What Warren Buffett says about
diversification
In 1992, Buffett said that his
investment strategy did not rely upon spreading his
risk over a large number of stocks; he preferred to
have his investments in a limited number of companies.
‘Many pundits would therefore
say the [this] strategy must be riskier than that
employed by more conventional investors. We disagree.
We believe that a policy of portfolio concentration
may well decrease risk if it raises, as it should,
both the intensity with which an investor thinks about
a business and the comfort-level he must feel with its
economic characteristics before buying into it.’
No real difference between Benjamin
Graham and Warren Buffett
The differences between Graham and
Buffett on stock diversification are perhaps not as
wide as they might seem. Graham spoke of
diversification primarily in relation to second grade
stocks and it is arguable that the Buffett approach to
stock selection results in the purchase of quality
stocks only.
Berkshire Hathaway holdings
In addition, consideration of
Berkshire Hathaway holdings in 2002 suggests that
although Buffett may not necessarily believe in
diversification in the number of companies that it
owns, its investments certainly cross a broad spectrum
of industry areas. They include:
- Manufacturing and distribution
– underwear, children’s clothing, farm
equipment, shoes, razor blades, soft drinks;
- Retail – furniture, kitchenware
- Insurance
- Financial and accounting products
and services
- Flight operations
- Gas pipelines
- Real estate brokerage
- Construction related industries
- Media
Intrinsic value
Both Warren Buffett and Benjamin
Graham talk about the intrinsic value of a business,
or a share in it. That is, to buy a business, or
a share in it, at a fair price. But, having regard to
the possibility of error in calculating intrinsic
value, the careful of investor should provide a margin
of error by only buying the business, or shares, at a
substantial discount to the intrinsic value.
Buffett is said to look for a 25 per
cent discount, but who really knows?
Defining intrinsic value
Buffett’s concept, in looking at
intrinsic value, is that it values what can be taken
out of the business. He has quoted investment guru
John Burr Williams who defined value like this:
‘The value of any stock, bond or
business today is determined by the cash inflows and
outflows – discounted at an appropriate interest
rate – that can be expected to occur during the
remaining life of the asset.’ – The Theory of
Investment Value.
The difference for Buffett in
calculating the value of bonds and shares is that the
investor knows the eventual price of the bond when it
matures but has to guess the price of the share at
some future date.
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
This method of valuation is often
referred to as the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
valuation method, but, as Buffett has said in relation
to shares, it is not easy to predict future cash flows
and this is why he sticks to investment in companies
that are consistent, well managed, and simple to
understand. A company that is hard to understand or
that changes frequently does not allow for easy
prediction of future earnings and outgoings.
What Warren Buffett says about
predicting future cash flows
In 1992, Warren Buffett said that:
‘Leaving question of price
aside, the best business to own is one that over an
extended period can employ large amounts of capital at
very high rates of return. The worst company to own is
one that must, or will, do the opposite – that is,
consistently employ ever-greater amounts of capital at
very low rates of return.’
It is well worth reading Buffet’s
analogy relating DCF to a university education in his
1994 Letter to Shareholders.
So, it would seem that the intrinsic
value of a share in a company relates to the DCF that
can be expected from the investment. There are
formulas for working out discounted cash flows and
they can be complex but they give a result.
Explanations of DCF
The best explanation that we have
read of DCF is by Lawrence A Cunningham in his
outstanding book How to think like Benjamin Graham
and invest like Warren Buffett.
How Warren Buffet determines a fair
price
The real secret of Warren Buffett is
the methods that he uses, some of which are known from
his remarks, and some of which are not, that allow him
to predict cash flows with some probability.
Various books about Warren Buffett
give their explanations as to how he calculates the
price that he is prepared to pay for a share with the
desired margin of safety.
Mary Buffett and David Clarke pose a
series of tests, based on past growth rates, returns
on equity, book value and government bond price
averages.
Robert G Hagstrom Jnr in The
Warren Buffet Way gives explanatory tables of past
Berkshire Hathaway purchases using a DCF model and
owner earnings.
Ultimately, the investor must decide
upon their own methods of arriving at the intrinsic
value of a share and the margin of error that they
want for themselves.
By buffettsecrets.com
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