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Friday, April 15, 2016

Value Investing - My Thoughts and Approaches

Background:
  • I started my corporate career as an IT Programmer and ended as an IT Infrastructure Project Manager as I decided to do something I'm passionate about
  • I have been actively involved in markets since 2002 and strongly believe in Fundamental Analysis of stocks and approaches of great value investors like Warren Buffett, Peter Lynch
  • I felt the valuations were extremely expensive and exited completely in end 2007 before the crash  and of course missed the subsequent rally as I wasn't comfortable with the overall fundamentals
  • I suggested partial profit booking same time last year as well, as there was a fundamental disconnect between the earnings and valuations
  • For the first time since 2008, I have started creating a portfolio for the long term since October 2015, because of the attractive valuations and the intentions of the Indian government in structural reforms
Just a disclaimer, the stock selections are purely my own and I am not licensed to offer stock recommendations.

Art of Investing and Markets:

I believe Investing is an art with a bit of science. Art part comes in understanding of the business, industry , future predictions and so on.  Also, different markets require different metrics for getting the right valuations. India is more of a growth story and stock appreciation, whereas Singapore is more of stable growth rate with decent dividend yields. The art in understanding the price to pay for, what we believe is decent returns. It took few years to understand the Singapore markets.

Metrics:
  • As you are aware, value investing requires different metrics for different sectors and stocks. There are so many factors which determine those
  • Some of the factors I use include P/E, P/B, D/E , Market Cap which is the science part and almost everyone uses them. I too use this as a reference
I also use PEG ratio on stocks which has delivered sustainable consistent growth with management quality
  • I try to identify the larger themes and on board the journey as soon as possible and enjoy the journey during the big growth phase. One eg is identifying Havells at the beginning of their CFL boom and how they expanded into domestic appliances. The same with BPCL when the pricing was adjusted to markets and the fall in oil prices helped recover their marketing losses
  • Currently, I am concentrating on the much beaten down power sector as I believe there are many multi-baggers sitting there if we believe in the good works of power minister Piyush Goyal
Past Recommendations/Views:
  • I wrote on the importance of Margin of safety, especially when the markets were defying fundamentals. Nifty was 7300 when I wrote the need for caution and nifty is higher only by 4%, but as you could see the sample portfolio with those 4 stocks I had given has out-performed significantly
  • When the fear was at the peak, I did suggest some stock recommendations with entry price here. Again, these have given excellent returns from those levels.
Reasons for Recommendation:

I shall share some thoughts on some of the Indian stock recommendations I made. I am also attaching the screenshots of my recommendations. I would like to keep it simple and stick to my circle of competence without bothering about the size of the circle.

IndusInd Bank (Recommended Price on 11th Feb Rs 810 ; CMP  Rs 986) :

IndusInd bank numbers are the dream for any fundamental value investors. They are doing what HDFC did 15 years ago, growing at a CAGR of 25% for the last 5 years. I was comfortable with the valuation of 25 times as I felt the growth is sustainable, considering the improvement in commercial vehicles segment and potential economic recovery. They are likely to end the year with Rs 41-42 per share and at Rs 810, am getting a company at 20 times, which will grow at 25 times. Even if the growth drops to 20%, there is still a potential 20% gains from current levels. There is huge margin of safety as they are likely to end up with Rs 50 per share for the next year which is only 15 times next year forward earnings. 

Larsen & Toubro (Recommended Price on 22nd Feb Rs 1150; CMP 1238) :

There has been a huge thrust on Infra development, though the words have not completely transformed into actions by the Govt. The stock has corrected almost 40% from almost 1900 levels. Consolidated EPS for last year was 51 and assuming they do the same for this year, it's available at 20 times. Stocks like LNT , HDFC will never be available at such valuations when everything is going fine. Also, the basic understanding is that India's economic reform can't progress without LNT being part of it and I thought it offers huge Margin of safety even assuming the order growth is muted
ICICI (Recommended Price on 22nd Feb Rs 198 and first around 240 post the correction; CMP 240) :

I don't believe in timing the markets; focus only on the valuations and the predictability of future growth. ICICI corrected to almost 12 times TTM at around 240 levels, which I felt was a good entry level for one of the leading private banks, I was personally very disappointed with the NPA of ICICI in the 3rd quarter, especially when you compare the likes of HDFCB and IndusInd and also considering their huge retail exposure. They reported Gross NPA of 5% which was almost PSU banks levels and quite rightly market hammered the stock post the results and also compounded by the overall sentiment. In spite of the huge NPA, Net Profits was still up for the first 9 months. They did Rs.22 per share last year.  You are getting one of the top private banks at 10 times and compare that to the 25-30 times of HDFCB for almost similar growth rates. I felt that market was extremely harsh with ICICI and the question I had to ask myself was "Will it go the PSU way or will they be able to fix" and if the answer is latter, it's a steal and the market will correct the anomaly soon and that's what has happened.

Tata Power and Praj Industries (Recommended Price on 22nd Feb Rs 59 / 80 ; CMP 70 / 91) :

These are theme based bets. The reforms in power sector and also the UDAY scheme of arrangement with state board should reform the sector better. Also, there is a major emphasis on the Ethanol blending and Praj is the only major structured player in the segment.
Singapore Stocks.
Singapore Banks (21st Feb UOB : $17.24 , CMP 19.64 | OCBC $7.98 , CMP $9.20) :

Singapore banks reporting increase in profits compared to the global peers. UOB spent close to $12M on buy backs last year.  Similar to ICICI, the first time I started liking was around the $20 levels, the same value as their NAV. So here you have one of the most conservative banks, who have spent $12M on buy backs, fundamentally still growing and available below book value. The stock has corrected more than 30% from the peak, offers a yield of 4% plus at $18 levels with the fundamentals still intact. I have seen similar situation in 2008 with some of the Singapore monopoly business like Straits times, Singtel offering 10% yield but the fundamentals weren't impacted due to the global financial crisis. I drew some parallel and thought it isn't 2008 and the company is still growing and available below NAV. Also they spent the most on buy backs. DBS reported 20% increase in net profits and the guidance is 7-8% growth for this year at an extremely attractive yield of 4%. The worst case scenario was increase in NPA from 0.9 to 1.3% if the oil drops to $20. So the choice was easy given the circumstances.
Keppel Infra ( 21st Feb recommended Price $0.485, CMP 0.50) :

This is an interesting business. The stock may not move much as it's more of a dividend play and the last few years have consistently given close to 7-8% yield. They have complete monopoly on the cylinder business, improving WTE and Newater business and couple of others. The merger with City Infra has further strengthened and offers 8% yield at that level. Singapore companies should be looked at flat revenues but the art part is identifying the par values so that they are attractive for the respective yields as most companies have limited growth opportunities. It provides almost 2% per quarter as divided yield
Fraser Hospitality Trust:

The company came out with an IPO for 0.88 cents in July 2014. They have so far out-performed the DPU projected during the IPO, both for the first year and the first quarter of this year. So with the fundamentals intact, the fear in market led its fall all the way to 0.72 cents with the yield increasing to 10%. As the numbers are better with a diversified portfolio and a not so high gearing, I felt it offers huge margin of safety.
Global Logistics Properties:

GLP is a very interesting company with the emphasis on state of the art technology for the logistics properties globally with diversified presence. It's a GIC owned company and the IPO happened at 1.96 in 2010 and went all the way up to 2.80. The reported net profits for 9 months of this year is 50% and the most recent quarter was 64%. They keep increasing lease space rapidly and in an important space of logistics. The valuations seemed extremely attractive considering the growth potential and backed by the management with huge financial capacity.