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Monday, September 26, 2011

Reality Show for Investors: "Survivor" by Weston Wellington


Note from Bruce:
The best stock performer in 5 or 10 years will probably be a company we haven't heard of today. History is filled with icons that have crumbled. A broadly diversified, passively managed fund is the best way to capture new stocks and tomorrow's best performers.
-Bruce J. Berno, CFP®

Anyone studying the long-run history of American business cannot help but observe how many of the prominent firms of one era fail to make it to the next. Free-market economies are characterized not only by intense competition but also by disruptive change. Sometimes a company's toughest competitor turns out to be a firm it has never heard of selling a product or service that didn't exist until recently. The list of companies that once dominated their industry but have fallen on hard times is lengthy enough to give every thoughtful investor reason for sober reflection.

Among many possible examples, a number of firms come to mind that were once highly regarded but later encountered serious or even fatal problems.

  • Bethlehem Steel pioneered the steel I-beam, which launched a skyscraper boom in cities across the country. Its engineering expertise supplied the steel sections for the Golden Gate Bridge. But growing competition and a changing marketplace eventually took their toll, and the firm filed for bankruptcy in 2001.
  • In 1973, Eastman Kodak held a seemingly impregnable position in the lucrative market for photo film and chemicals, enjoyed a reputation for innovation and astute marketing, and boasted a market value even greater than oil giant Exxon. Kodak shareholders had been favored with an uninterrupted stream of dividends dating back to 1902. Today the company is struggling to reinvent itself as the film business shrivels, the dividend has been suspended, and the share price is limping along under $3.
  • Fortune article profiling Pfizer in mid-1998 praised it for having "one of the richest product pipelines in the Fortune 500." A Wall Street analyst enthused that "some of my clients refer to Pfizer as the best company in the S&P 500." In early 1999, a Forbes cover story sounded a similar note, crowning Pfizer "Company of the Year" and observing that "the people who brought us Viagra have more blockbusters on the way." Thirteen years later, the Viagra boom has subsided, patents are expiring on highly profitable products, and the gusher investors expected from the research pipeline has slowed to a trickle. The share price has slumped over 50% since year-end 1998 compared to a 3% loss for the S&P 500 Index.

Some companies almost single-handedly create new industries but still find it difficult to turn innovation into a permanent advantage. Pan Am (air travel), Kmart (discount retailing), Polaroid (instant photography), and Wang Laboratories (word processing) all had impressive initial success and provided handsome rewards for their investors. Alas, neither Pan Am nor Polaroid survives today, and Kmart shareholders were wiped out when the firm emerged from bankruptcy in 2003. (Kmart, Polaroid, and Wang Laboratories were all cited as examples of "excellent" companies in the 1982 bestseller In Search of Excellence.)

Evidence of this "creative destruction" appears all around us. For example, the Wall Street Journal reported that shares of Minnesota-based Best Buy Co. slumped Wednesday (9/14) to their lowest level since 2008 after reporting a 30% drop in quarterly profits. For most of its life, Best Buy has been the toughest kid on the block, vanquishing rivals such as Highland Superstores and Circuit City on its way to becoming the nation's leading electronics retailer.

Will Best Buy fall victim to even tougher competitors such as Amazon.com or Walmart? Or is this current downturn just a speed bump on the road to even greater success? No one can say. For every riches-to-rags story, we can find another tale of decline followed by dramatic recovery. According to some accounts, for example, Apple was only a few months from bankruptcy when Steve Jobs returned to the company in 1997. Now it vies with ExxonMobil for the number one spot in a ranking by market cap. And who would have imagined that a floundering New England textile firm with a low-margin business that sells suit-lining fabric would one day become a financial colossus known as Berkshire Hathaway?

The thrill of owning a great growth company during its most lucrative phase is a powerful incentive to search for the Next Big Thing. But almost every company with a highly profitable position is under constant attack from competitors seeking to garner a portion of those hefty profits for themselves.

As a result, the search for firms destined to generate greater-than-expected profits for many years into the future is fraught with peril and likely to end in frustration. Most investors will be far better off harnessing the forces of competitive markets and putting them to work on their behalf by holding a diversified portfolio. As Nobel laureate Merton Miller once observed, "Above-normal profits always carry with them the seeds of their own decay."

Miguel Bustillo and Matt Jarzemsky, "Best Buy Gets Squeezed" Wall Street Journal, September 14, 2011.

David Stipp, "Why Pfizer Is So Hot," Fortune, May 11, 1998.

"Pfizer: Company of the Year," Forbes, January 11, 1999.

Standard & Poor's Stock Guide, 1974.

Thomas Peters and Robert Waterman, In Search of Excellence (HarperCollins, 1982).

Merton Miller, "Is American Corporate Governance Fatally Flawed?" Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, Vol. 6, No. 4, Winter 1994.


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About Bruce J. Berno, CFP®
Bruce J. Berno, CFP® is the founder of Berno Financial Management, Inc. a fee-only comprehensive personal financial planning and investment advisory firm headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio. Since 1993, Berno Financial Management has been helping individuals and families achieve financial peace of mind. For more information about Berno Financial Management, visit http://www.bernofinmgt.com/.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

What's the Probablity

The future is always uncertain. I am not a gambling man, but many times decisions are made by asking the question, “What are the chances that this is going to be successful?”

When it comes to investing, the probability is in our favor in the strategic decisions that we have made. It is also important to understand that no strategy works successfully 100% of the time, so what is the probability of:

A. U.S. large-company stocks beating one-month Treasury bills?


We may be in one of the minority periods now, but given that one-month Treasury bills are at 0% now, the chances of stocks doing better in the future are pretty good.

B. U.S. large-value-style stocks beating the S&P 500?


C. U.S. small stocks beating U.S. large stocks?


More importantly, add to these questions how stocks perform coming out of a recession, which is certainly a fair way to describe our current environment:

A. How have U.S. large- and small-company stocks performed after recessions since 1953?


B. How have value-style stocks performed after recessions since 1970?


Value-style stocks significantly outperformed growth-style stocks after recessions for both large- and small-company stocks for all time periods referenced above.

I am also reminded of a friend who rented a motorboat while on vacation, but the motor wouldn’t start properly and he had to leave the motor idling when not in motion. When he made this fact known to the marina owner, he got a nice southern drawl answer of, “Well, nothing’s perfect…” Truly memorable words to live by.

Clearly, we want you to understand that no investment strategy works 100% of the time. U.S. value-style stocks, both large and small, and U.S. small-company stocks have underperformed in July and August 2011, after having generally outperformed in the first half of the year. Using our “let’s look forward, not back” theme, the probability of stocks beating bonds and value-style and small company stocks providing superior performance coming out of recession is pretty good. In today’s age, having reasons to be hopeful should provide much appreciated financial peace of mind.


About Bruce J. Berno, CFP®
Bruce J. Berno, CFP® is the founder of Berno Financial Management, Inc. a fee-only comprehensive personal financial planning and investment advisory firm headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio. Since 1993, Berno Financial Management has been helping individuals and families achieve financial peace of mind. For more information about Berno Financial Management, visit http://www.bernofinmgt.com/.