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SECURITY ANALYSIS | PART 4 - BONDS & PREFERRED STOCKS (BY BEN GRAHAM) - YouTube
Channel: The Swedish Investor
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So, this is the fourth and final part of this series!
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Endings of series haven't really lived up to the expectations of the audience, as of late, but I hope this one will be different.
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In the first video, we talked about three different categories of securities -
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fixed value investments, senior securities with speculative features, and common stocks.
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We've covered the last group of securities already, but now we'll get to the first two.
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Let's start with fixed value investments.
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Takeaway number 1: The selection of fixed value investments: corporate bonds.
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Investments in fixed value senior securities involves issues where changes in market price can be said to hold only a minor
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importance, at least the upside, of the investment.
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The investor's primary interest in such securities
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is that of creating a safe and reliable source of passive income.
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Therefore, it must be limited to high-grade securities only.
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Bonds are essentially a lone, issued against a fixed interest rate. The interest rate (or the "yield") is typically paid out
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once or twice a year in the form of a coupon, and
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depends on the quality of the company and the "time to maturity" (in other words, when the loan is expected to be paid back).
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For instance, McDonald's recently released two new issues - maturing in 2026 and in
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2034, and
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yielding 0.89% and 2.87% respectively, while
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Sanofi, a major drug manufacturer with a better credit rating than McDonald's, recently released an issue maturing in
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2034 as well, but yielding only 1.23%.
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As stated in video number one, bonds have an unqualified right to fixed interest payments and an
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unqualified right to the repayment of the loan
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(or principal amount), but no other participation right in neither assets nor profits.
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Here are four principles in selecting fixed value bonds:
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1. Safety is measured by the company's ability to meet its obligations
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When buying bonds for fixed value investments, all you should care about is earning power.
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Some people would argue that if a company goes bankrupt,
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bondholders have a priority to the assets, so it would make sense to consider those as well. But Benjamin Graham argues that
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the primary aim of the bond buyer must be to avoid trouble, and not to protect himself in the event of trouble.
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2. Evaluate under depressive conditions
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As security is of the highest importance when doing fixed value investing, it does make sense to measure earning power under difficult conditions.
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So today, you'd probably want to go back to the financial crisis to see how the company you're thinking about buying bonds from
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performed during 2008 to 2009.
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3. Coupon rates cannot compensate for deficient safety
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The investor cannot afford to expose himself to even a small risk of losing his principal at,
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say, $1,000, in return for an extra, say, $50 of income from coupons.
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The whole premise of fixed value investing is that you shouldn't have to rely on the
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insecurities of the future,
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because if you do, you must be able to gain as a reward for being right, as you would always be
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penalized for being wrong.
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And investing in bonds near par value doesn't give you that.
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They don't appreciate in value, unless the interest rates experience a major change, and
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no matter what, they will still be worth the par value at maturity.
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4. Use exclusion and specific quantitative tests
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Instead of finding the bonds with the highest potential yields and
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then look for safety, one must do the reverse when investing for fixed value.
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First,
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exclude all issues of questionable security. Use a minimum standard, then work yourself upwards regarding yields.
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When calculating the interest coverage for interest expenses, you must use all
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obligations that are equivalent to bond interest, and thus you may also need to include expenses such as rentals and guarantees.
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And yes, there are many other factors that could be considered to assure the safety of a corporate bond, outside of interest coverage and
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market cap to debts.
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But if you want to add extra safety, you might as well increase your minimum requirements on these two points instead of
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complicating things by adding additional statistics.
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Sometimes less is more.
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As a side note,
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governmental backed debt is much easier for the individual investor to acquire than individual corporate bonds,
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and there are other alternatives to fixed value bonds as well, such as paying off your mortgage.
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Takeaway number 2: The selection of fixed value investments: preferred stocks
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Preferred stocks are very similar to bonds when they are bought as fixed value investments.
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Typically, preferred stocks don't have a specific date when they mature though,
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but companies may choose to buy back the issues because of changes in interest rates.
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A major difference between bonds and preferred stocks though, is that preferred stocks don't have to be paid anything at all,
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unless the common shareholders receive something too.
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Benjamin Graham and David Dodd are therefore very skeptical to investments in preferred stocks, for fixed value purposes.
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"That the typical preferred stock represents an unattractive form of investment contract is hardly open to question. On
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the one hand, its principal value and income return are both limited. On the other hand,
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the owner has no fixed enforceable claim to payment of either principal or income."
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The four guidelines mentioned previously for investing in bonds for a fixed value purposes, apply to preferred stocks too,
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but because of their lack of
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enforceable claims, the minimum standards must be erased to the following.
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Furthermore, the interest coverage ratio must include not only the payments on bonds, but also that on preferred stocks.
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In 1932, only 5% of the listed preferred stocks met the criteria.
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Benjamin Graham concludes that, not only are preferred stocks of the fixed value type exceptional,
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but they must also be called anomalies or even mistakes, as they are preferred stocks that should have been issued as bonds.
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Because, whenever the business issuing the preferred stock
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derives a benefit from its right to withhold the dividend payments, the owner does not have a fixed value investment.
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And on the other hand, whenever the issue is of high grade and suspension of dividends are very unlikely,
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the issuer should have used bonds instead, as they are typically priced relatively higher.
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Takeaway number 3: Senior securities of inadequate safety
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The previously mentioned bonds of Sanofi with the yield of 1.23% until maturing in
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2034, is regarded as a safe investment by the market.
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Compare this to a bond from Bed Bath and Beyond, a retail store, which also matures in 2034 but yields
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7.68% instead. The difference is quiet major.
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Does this mean that there's a 6.45% free lunch?
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No, of course not. The market thinks about the bond of Bed Bath and Beyond as one of inadequate safety, and
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therefore, the yield is higher.
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Such speculative bonds and preferred stocks should be viewed from the common stock direction. The evaluation of the issuing company,
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before deciding to make a purchase, should be pretty much the same.
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Furthermore, it's not enough that the coupon rate is higher than that of a high grade senior security,
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the security must also be priced at 70% of its par value, or less.
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Why?
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Because, as previously mentioned,
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when you rely on insecurities of the future, there must be a reward for being right as you will always be penalized for being wrong.
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The reward, in this case,
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represents the possibility that the issue can appreciate almost 50% in value to be priced at par,
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if the company does well.
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Also, beware!
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An investment in a senior security of this speculative sort,
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should never be made if it requires the assumption that the common stock is also priced too low at the time.
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Because if the investor is correct about his judgment of the common stock,
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it would be more profitable to buy the share instead of the speculative senior security, and if he's wrong,
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the price of the senior security will probably drop too.
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There is an exception to this rule, which we'll get to in the final takeaway.
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Takeaway number 4: Senior securities with speculative privileges
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Some senior securities come with speculative privileges,
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which makes it so that we no longer can classify them in the category of fixed income investments.
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There are primarily three different types of such securities:
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Convertibles
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The owner of the security has the right to exchange his senior security for common stock on specific terms.
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Participation
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Not only does the owner have a right to interest payments, but he has the right to additional income too,
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usually in proportion to the dividends paid on the common stock.
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Subscription
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The holder of a senior security of this sort, has the right to purchase common stocks on predefined terms.
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The attractiveness of the form of these securities cannot be overstated.
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They possess a combination of maximum safety and a possibility of unlimited
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appreciation in value at the same time.
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However ..
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The investor in a security of this type must decide if he's buying because of the attractiveness from a fixed value investment perspective, or
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because of the speculative participation in the common stock.
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When investing from the fixed value investment perspective,
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Benjamin Graham argues that the terms of the agreement are more important than selecting the company with the common stock
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most likely to increase in value.
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Not because it has a higher impact, but because it can be dealt with more definitely.
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The terms should be evaluated from three perspectives:
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The extent of profit sharing to investment.
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The higher the better!
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For example, company A has bonds with a warrant (a subscription privilege) attached to them,
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stating that for every $10 in bonds, $20 in stocks can be bought.
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Company B has bonds that allow for the purchase of only $10 of common stock.
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Should the stocks of these companies appreciate in value,
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you want to be able to buy as much as possible,
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and therefore, the bond of company A is preferable to the bond of company B.
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The closeness to realizable profit
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The closer, the better!
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For example,
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company A has bonds convertible into common stock at $10. The current price of the stock of company a is $9.
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Company B has bonds that are convertible at $10 too, but the current price of its stock is $8.
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Therefore, the bond of company A is preferable, as
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its stock must increase only about 11% before the convertible is profitable,
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while the stock of Company B must increase
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25% for the privilege of its bond to be profitable.
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The duration of the privilege
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The longer, the better!
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Say that company A has bonds that can be converted for the next 20 years,
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while Company B has bonds that can only be converted for the next five.
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Everything is equal, you'd prefer the bond of company A, as
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in this situation, you have the option to wait much longer for the privilege to become profitable.
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Takeaway number 5: Switching
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When the price of a common stock and a convertible issue are exactly equivalent, on an exchange basis,
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the two issues are said to be selling at "parity".
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On the other hand, when the price of the senior security is above the common stock,
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it's said to sell at a "premium", and lastly if it's priced lower, it's called "discount".
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When a common stock is hyped up due to trendiness, or similar,
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there's a considerable amount of speculative demand for the stock and,
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at times, this causes the convertible senior security to be priced near parity or even at a discount.
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Finally, we've actually found a situation in which a definite,
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mathematical conclusion can be arrived at in the field of security analysis.
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Here's an example from
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1936, which Benjamin Graham gives in the book.
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Paramount Pictures corporation
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had issued a preferred share with $6 in dividend that, at any time, was convertible into seven common shares.
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At a certain point, the preferred stock was selling at
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$113 against almost $16 for the common,
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so just the speculative privilege of the preferred share was worth
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$112 at the time.
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In addition, the preferred share had
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$12 in accumulated dividend, which had to be paid before the common stock could receive anything.
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Clearly, if the common stock was worth $16, the preferred share should be priced at no less than
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$124, so the owner of a common share in Paramount Pictures corporation
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should definitely have switched into the preferred one in this instance.
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Such opportunities are rare, for sure, and they're probably even more uncommon these days than in Graham's time.
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But in times of turmoil, they may present themselves again.
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And who will profit from them? Only the intelligent investor and rigorous security analyst.
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Bonds of investment grade can be found by insisting that minimum quantitative standards should be met under depressed circumstances.
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Preferred shares are inferior to bonds as fixed value investments, in their form,
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but you can still find such issues. You do it by increasing your quantitative threshold.
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Senior securities of inadequate safety should meet the same requirements as when investing in common stocks, and
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in addition, they must be priced at least 30% lower than par.
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The attractiveness of senior securities with participation rights should primarily be evaluated from a terms-
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perspective, and the investor wants to see high profit sharing to investment, a price close to a realizable profit, and a long duration.
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In times of market turmoil,
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mathematically demonstratable evidence sometimes presents itself which allows the investor to switch from one security
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to another one with confidence.
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Even though I covered twenty takeaways in this series,
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there are many more in the actual book.
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If you decide to get the book, feel free to use the affiliate link in the description of this video.
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Big thanks, by the way, to those of you who helped me with my decision anxiety and
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participated in the poll.
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Next up is Trading For a Living, by. Dr. Alex Elder. I hope to see you then!
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