THE LITTLE BOOK THAT BEATS THE MARKET (BY JOEL GREENBLATT) - YouTube

Channel: The Swedish Investor

[0]
This is a top 5 takeaways video summary of The Little Book That Beats the Market,
[6]
by Joel Greenblatt, the famous inventor of the magic formula.
[12]
What should you be doing with all your hard-earned money?
[16]
You could ...
[17]
Put it under a mattress
[19]
Lend it to a bank
[21]
Lend it to a company
[23]
Or, you could invest it in a company, in the stock market.
[29]
This is probably the best alternative.
[32]
The problem is just that most people have no business investing in individual stocks on their own, or, as
[39]
Joel Greenblatt puts it:
[41]
"Choosing individual stocks without any idea of what you're looking for is like running through a dynamite factory with a burning match.
[49]
You may live, but just still an idiot."
[54]
There is a solution though.
[56]
It's all too early in the video for me to reveal it, but let's just say that it rhymes with the bagic mormula.
[68]
Takeaway number 1: The madness of the markets
[73]
Think of a company, any company.
[78]
Oh, that's a good one. Yeah, Amazon it is.
[82]
During the last year, you could have bought Amazon
[84]
for as low as $1377, and as high as $2012,
[91]
a price difference of about 50%..
[94]
Not just that, but the value of the whole company bounced from about a $1 trillion,
[100]
down to approximately $650 billion, and then back up to $1 trillion again!
[107]
Well, what's your point? you may ask.
[110]
My point is that,
[112]
Amazon - the business - didn't shift in value that quickly.
[116]
The market is simply overreacting to the information that it is presented with.
[122]
But this all may just be a fluke,
[124]
maybe you, when I asked you to pick a company, happen to pick an extremely volatile one.
[130]
All right, then. I'll give you another shot.
[133]
Think of a company.
[137]
What was that?
[139]
Okay sure. Yeah, Gap should do.
[143]
During the last year, you could have bought Gap, America's largest fashion retailer, for as little as $18 per share
[151]
(actually, that's the current price) and as high as
[154]
$31 per share. That's an even bigger difference, more than 70%!
[160]
Do you think that Gap sold 70% more clothes ten months ago than they do today?
[166]
NO!
[167]
Clearly, at times, the market doesn't know what it is doing.
[176]
Takeaway number 2: How much is a business worth?
[181]
When looking at these fluctuations, it's fairly simple to tell that the market isn't always efficient.
[188]
Sometimes, greed is ruling and prices are too high, and at other times, fear is ruling, and the prices are too low.
[196]
Suppose that the value of the Amazon (as a business) fluctuated between $1,500 and $1,700
[204]
during the last year, while the prices fluctuated between $1,377 and $2,012.
[212]
If you could state this with any kind of certainty,
[215]
becoming rich trading Amazon stocks would be a really simple task.
[220]
Just buy it whenever the price goes way below
[223]
$1,500. and sell it whenever it goes way above $1,700.
[229]
The problem is it is not that simple.
[233]
Let's take an example.
[235]
One of your friends owns a shop called
[238]
"The Swedish Merchant". It sells only Swedish stuff.
[244]
The shop made a profit of $100,000 last year.
[248]
How much would you be willing to pay for it, knowing this?
[254]
Well, your guess is as good as mine (as long as you guessed somewhere between $500,000 and $2 million).
[262]
In the stock market, you're typically provided with more information than this before you ask to determine the price of a business,
[269]
but the difficulties are the same nonetheless.
[273]
Firstly,
[274]
$100,000 is just what The Swedish Merchants earned last year. We must determine if it, after our purchase,
[281]
will be able to generate more or less than that, in the coming year.
[285]
Secondly, we must decide how confident we are in that prediction. And thirdly it's not just about the next year,
[292]
potentially we could own The Swedish Merchant for a very long time. So we have to estimate (okay, guess),
[298]
how much the business will earn 5 to 10 years from now as well, in order to be able to set a definite price tag on it.
[305]
Head over to my summary of The Dhandho Investor for more on this.
[314]
Takeaway number 3: PE and ROA
[319]
So far, we've concluded that stocks sometimes sell at a discount from their underlying value,
[324]
but that it's very difficult to decide WHEN that is happening.
[330]
So is it hopeless?
[333]
No, obviously not, because otherwise I would be wasting your time, which is something I would never do.
[341]
Unless of course, I would make a pointless fill-in clip.
[345]
Let me present The Swedish Merchant's most fearsome competitor - "Just Broccoli".
[352]
The Swedish Merchant earns
[355]
$100,000 per year, like I presented before, while Just Broccoli earns $50,000.
[361]
The price of the businesses is $1 million each.
[365]
Which one would you rather buy, everything else equal?
[372]
You would buy The Swedish Merchant, of course.
[374]
Here, you only pay $10 for every $1 in earnings.
[379]
In Just Broccoli's case, you pay $20 for every $1 in earnings.
[384]
The Swedish Merchant would pay your initial investment back in 10 years,
[388]
compared to Just Broccoli's 20 years.
[392]
In the stock market, the most common way of measuring this, is through the so called price to earnings, or p/e ratio.
[399]
The p/e ratio is calculated by taking a business current price and dividing it by its earnings.
[407]
The p/e of The Swedish Merchant is 10, and that of Just Broccoli is 20.
[413]
This is the first point of this takeaway - you would rather own a business with a low p/e than a high one.
[423]
Simultaneously, price is not everything.
[426]
Even buying at a low p/e can result in a disastrous investment. You must also make sure that you buy a good business.
[434]
This is where return on assets, or ROA, comes into play.
[440]
Let's say that building that store of The Swedish Merchant cost $500,000, and
[446]
the store of Just Broccoli also cost $500,000.
[451]
Everything else equal, would you rather invest in the company that can build stores with
[457]
$100,000 in profits, for
[459]
$500,000, or the company that can build stores with
[462]
$50,000 in profits, for $500,000?
[469]
Once again, you would prefer The Swedish Merchant's business篓.
[473]
This ratio is referred to as return on assets, or ROA.
[478]
The higher, the better.
[481]
It says something about the quality of the business, and with comparable companies,
[486]
it can often show you which of the companies that possess the best moat,
[490]
something that Warren Buffett loves to see in his investments.
[495]
For more on important ratios to consider when making an investment,
[499]
please see my summary of The Interpretation of Financial Statements, by Benjamin Graham.
[509]
Takeaway number 4: The magic formula
[513]
If you stick to buying good companies, or in other words those with a high ROA,
[519]
while buying these companies at low prices, or in other words when their p/e ratios are low, you
[526]
will end up buying underpriced businesses.
[530]
Joel Greenblatt's even constructed a system that will do just that for you, which he calls "the magic formula".
[538]
It's simply ranking companies according to their combined score in these two regards -
[543]
the quality and the price of the business.
[547]
Intuitively, it does make a lot of sense.
[550]
And when back testing it, it does make a lot of financial sense as well.
[556]
During the 17 years period that Joel Greenblatt evaluated the magic formula, it
[562]
outperformed the overall market by about 18%,
[566]
returning 30.8% per year rather than 12.3% per year.
[572]
With such a return, $10,000 turned into almost a million in 17 years, as
[579]
compared to the markets more modest increase to just $70,000.
[584]
Some of the companies that you'll invest in using this formula, will turn out to be crappy investments.
[589]
But the important thing is that ON AVERAGE, it will help you to find true bargains.
[596]
If you're not impressed by the results yet,
[599]
consider what happened when Joel Greenblatt divided companies into ten different groups,
[605]
ranking them with the formula.
[607]
As you can see, it's quite a good predictor.
[610]
The best group performed better than the second-best, and the second-best perform better than the third-best, and so on.
[617]
Crazy!
[623]
Takeaway number five: Step-by-step instructions
[628]
Here comes a step-by-step instruction on how to invest using the magic formula.
[633]
But, just remember ...
[635]
"The ideas and strategies presented on this channel should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.
[641]
Please remember that past performance may not be indicative of future results."
[645]
1. Go to magicformulainvesting.com
[650]
2. Choose a company size. 50 million or bigger should do.
[656]
3. Follow the instructions on the site to get a list of top-ranked magic formula companies.
[663]
4. Buy between five and seven of these companies. Spend 20%-33% of the capital that you intend to invest.
[673]
5. Repeat step 4 every two to three months, until all your capital is invested.
[679]
This should result in a portfolio of about 20 to 30 stocks.
[685]
6. Sell the stocks after holding them for a year.
[689]
For tax purposes, hold the winners a few days longer than a year, and the losers a few days shorter.
[695]
Repeat step 4 with the money from your selling.
[699]
7. Continue the process for many years
[705]
If you are like me, and you find investing to be a very challenging and stimulating interest,
[711]
that you don't want to throw away for some automatic formula (with a name that makes it sound like a scam, by the way),
[716]
you could use it for screening purposes only.
[720]
For example, find the top 100 companies according to the magic formula and then pick your favorite 10 out of those.
[730]
A quick summary:
[732]
Market prices fluctuate more than underlying business values.
[737]
It's difficult to estimate the future earnings of a company, and therefore also what a fair price of that company should be.
[745]
Most investors have no business doing this.
[749]
P/E and ROA are two of the most (if not the most) important quantitative factors to consider when buying stocks.
[758]
According to the magic formula, if you buy stocks with a low P/E and a high ROA,
[764]
you will outperform the market by a wide margin over time.
[769]
Go to magicformulainvesting.com and get started!
[774]
And last but not least ..
[776]
It is difficult to come up with something that rhymes with magic formula.
[781]
Cheers!