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The Dumbest Investment I've Ever Seen

While 2008 was a bad year for us individual investors, it was downright nasty for the Wall Street smarty-pantses who started this mess.

If "sophisticated" traders at firms like Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, and what's left of Lehman Brothers learn anything from this debacle, hopefully it will be that they need to rethink the wisdom of massive debt and absurdly complex financial products.

They clearly haven't learned it yet
Take credit default swaps (CDSs) on U.S. government bonds, for example. They're essentially insurance policies. If the U.S. Treasury defaults on its loans, CDSs guarantee that other Wall Street firms would pay those claims.

It's true that, since October, the Treasury's balance sheet has taken on additional risk in the form of TARP and other bailout-related obligations.

But wait: What scenario can you imagine that would wipe out the U.S. Treasury yet leave AIG (NYSE: AIG  ) or even Goldman Sachs in good enough shape to pay out billions in T-bill claims?

Coming up blank? Me too.

Talk about a dumb investment
CDSs on U.S. government bonds are like insurance policies on a Monopoly game: Either you win and didn't need the policy, or you lose and get an IOU for money that's not worth the paper it's printed on. In other words, whatever happens, you're now down by whatever amount you paid for that policy.

So, why would some of the smartest minds in finance buy them?

Strangely, our brains are hard-wired to prefer perceived certainty over uncertainty -- even if it sometimes means taking on higher risk. This psychological fact -- which is known as the Ellsberg paradox -- partly explains why Wall Street would take a certain loss in return for the false sense of security CDSs on T-bills provide.

Which got me thinking ...
If the dumbest investment around amounts to one with all downside and no upside, then the smartest would be the investment with almost no downside but tremendous upside.

And in fact, that's exactly what the best investors look for. Monish Pabrai, whose Pabrai Investments has managed 14.8% annualized returns since its inception almost a decade ago, compared with -1.6% returns for the Dow, explains his market-beating strategy as "heads, I win; tails, I don't lose much."

That is to say, he looks for:

  1. Simple, stable businesses with moats and high returns on capital -- think Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO  ) .
  2. Distressed businesses in distressed industries, like Weyerhaeuser (NYSE: WY  ) .
  3. High-uncertainty, low-risk situations. He cites Microsoft as an example, which in 1980, bought QDOS for $50,000 and sold a modified version -- MS-DOS -- to IBM. One year later, Bill Gates visited Apple and got the idea of a mouse and graphical user interface for free. It wasn't clear if either MS-DOS or the graphical user interface would work. If they didn't, it wouldn't much matter to the bottom line. But if they did, it'd make quite a difference indeed.
  4. Large margins of safety. Warren Buffett's big bet on The Washington Post (NYSE: WPO  ) in the early 1970s for less than one-quarter its estimated intrinsic value netted his company $800 million on a $10.6 million investment.

Together, these criteria

  1. Limit your risk.
  2. Maximize your upside.

In other words, they're exactly the kind of smart investments we're looking for.

What does Pabrai like today?
Environments like this one are ripe for Pabrai's strategy because the market is full of stocks that Wall Street won't touch because it confuses uncertainty with risk.

As he recently told my Foolish colleague Morgan Housel, "Because of all the recent turmoil we've seen, there are some incredible opportunities outside the financial-services space. Right now, that's really the place to make some hay!"

Specifically, Pabrai says he's looking for companies trading at a discount to their future cash flows. Who fits those criteria right now? I ran a screen to find stocks that are highly profitable, enjoy increasing sales, and are trading at low free-cash-flow multiples:

Company

Enterprise Value-to-Free Cash Flow

Return on Capital

Revenue Growth

Industry

Walter Energy (NYSE: WLT  )

8.8

20%

15%

Coal

Terra Nitrogen (NYSE: TNH  )

6.6

80%

2%

Fertilizer

Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY  )

9.5

22%

5%

Pharmaceuticals

Data from Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

None of these are official recommendations, but they could be interesting starting places for further research.

What you should do
Right now, the market is clearly pricing some bad news into stocks, which means that just like Buffett, Gates, and Pabrai, you can make a lot of money if you're willing to put in the work to separate the value traps from the tremendous bargains that are out there. To do that, you'll want to make sure your investments have:

  • Strong moats.
  • Limited or unlikely worst-case scenarios.
  • Honest and capable management.
  • Significant margins of safety to their book values or discounted cash flows.

These are just some of the criteria we, like Pabrai, look for when we evaluate investment opportunities at Motley Fool Inside Value. If you're interested, you can access all of our analysis, research reports, and best ideas for new money now. Click here to get started -- there's no obligation to subscribe.

Already a member of Inside Value? Log in at the top of this page.

This article was originally published on Jan. 29, 2009. It has been updated.

Ilan Moscovitz owns shares of Apple, a Motley Fool Stock Advisor pick. Microsoft and Coke are Inside Value recommendations. Coke is also an Income Investor pick. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On August 10, 2009, at 4:26 PM, tk77mann wrote:

    A correction needed - Eli Lilly is in the Pharmaceutical industry, not shipping as specified above..

  • Report this Comment On August 10, 2009, at 7:24 PM, Florida2009 wrote:

    that's what I gonna say ... Lilly's not in shipping; it develops good drugs!

  • Report this Comment On August 10, 2009, at 7:37 PM, jerryguru69 wrote:

    I had the same question. Last fall, I had never even heard of “credit default swaps”. Wait: they sell these things for Treasuries? Guh? Well, sometimes, ignorance is bliss, and I think this is one of those times.

    DAY TRADING

    Hedge fund A is sure, due to its superior traders and research staff, that they can out-guess their competitors hedge fund B, C, D, and E.

    SYNTHETIC BONDS

    I am not kidding. Google it. If the fake thing yields more than the real thing, buy it (!).

    PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

    You manage a portfolio of CDS’, and have some dandies that you love. Word comes from on high that you need to decrease the risk profile. Rather than dump you beloveds, you pick up some Treasury CDS’s to even out the risk profile; voila.

  • Report this Comment On August 11, 2009, at 10:20 AM, TMFDiogenes wrote:

    Thanks, we made the correction.

    jerryguru,

    Yeah, wow. Synthetic bonds are nutso.

  • Report this Comment On August 31, 2009, at 5:47 PM, Rvishneski wrote:

    I beleive an overlooked "smart" play is tire and rubber companies, especially copper tire (ctb), down 85% from it's July 07 highs and has recouped about half to date and has paid a dividend for 150+ quarters in a row. Not to mention oil being 1/3 of it's highs which helps with production costs. even if car sales are non-existent at some point tires need to be replaced... That time is coming!

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