Showing posts with label Investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Investing. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2010

Looking outside to forecast earnings



Business Times - 20 Aug 2010
BT-STARMINE AWARDS

Daiwa Capital Markets' Chris Sanda, a veteran analyst and top earnings estimator, shares his view with LYNETTE KHOO on what it requires to be a good analyst
WHEN it comes to earnings forecast, the answers are not always found in the excel spreadsheets laboriously drawn up by analysts, or the line items on the company's balance sheets. The answers are often found right outside the company.
Failing to pay attention to the external signals means that one could be missing the woods for the tree, one StarMine award-winning analyst believes.
'I find that accuracy is not necessarily happening because of my earnings model per se. The answer is not in the excel spreadsheet. The answer is outside the excel spreadsheet and asking people who really know this industry - people who do this day in day out. So, these are the suppliers, the vendors, the customers and the competitors within the industry,' says Chris Sanda, senior investment analyst at Daiwa Capital Markets Singapore.
'You could stare at the company when all the action is happening behind you and the rest of the world and any form of action that is happening within the company is a reflection of a much bigger trend,' the veteran analyst said.
For his 2009 recommendations and estimates, Mr Sanda is ranked No 1 earnings estimator for the industrials sector, the No 2 stock picker for retail and consumer products sector, and the No 3 stock picker for the industrials sector at the BT-StarMine Analyst Awards 2010.
He believes his earnings models are 'very much like everyone else's'. The difference that sets analysts apart lies in the assumptions they arrive at based on public information.
This is why he believes being a good listener and keeping abreast of the latest information are key traits an analyst should possess.
Noble experience
For earnings estimates of industrials stocks, Mr Sanda is ranked first of 25 analysts covering Sembcorp Marine, second of 16 analysts covering Sembcorp Industries and fourth of 13 analysts covering Noble Group.
He recalls how he was very bullish on Noble and sticking to a 'buy' rating when most analysts were bearish on the stock.
Noble was a 'very misunderstood' stock, he says.
'It was very easy to envision big problems happening for that company because it is very leveraged and there has been margins fall. But the reality is they are a well-managed company that can manage its business spreads and their debt isn't a necessity of how they finance their working capital,' Mr Sanda explains.
Constant curiosity
These observations came as a result of keeping his ears close to the ground to understand how the company operates.
Mr Sanda started out in this industry since 1996 as a buy-side analyst with various firms before joining Daiwa three years ago on the sell-side.
He believes that the stamina to remain in this job is having the curiosity to know what makes companies tick.
'One needs to be a constant student of business and have the type of mind that is constantly curious,' he says. This, perhaps, is exactly what motivates him despite the hard reality of his job.
'The reality is we are the poor bankers. We don't get paid as much as others. We work longer hours but we get less credit than others,' Mr Sanda puts it candidly.
'We have to do a lot of different tasks that, at times, are not that fun - sometimes, data entry, rehashing of numbers or making repetitive calls late into the night and working with very little sleep. If one looks forward to all these factors and still wants to come back to do it, there is always room for people who want that kind of 'punishment'.
'But I am those type of people,' he quips. 'I'm a curious person and I want to know what makes these companies tick. I get a rise out of being right and it frustrates me when I'm wrong. And that's the way it should be. You need to care and keep trying and trying again.'

Looking for dark horses in the Singapore market



By GABRIEL YAP
THE Singapore economy continued to roar in the second quarter of this year and I reckon it will surpass the first quarter's reported year-on-year growth of 16 per cent. This would have been powered by the two key sectors - financials and manufacturing, both of which contribute close to 50 per cent of Singapore's GDP.
Bank loans rose for seven consecutive months to 8 per cent in May 2010 on the back of strong housing and consumer loans at 21 per cent and 15 per cent respectively.
Notably, the growth in consumer loans at 15 per cent was the highest in the past five years. Moreover, car loans and credit card loans grew at a commensurate 12 per cent and 27 per cent respectively.
The biomed sector was the lynchpin of industrial output growth which grew a whopping 58 per cent in May 2010. Excluding the volatile biomed sector, the rest of the economy would still have grown a respectable 33 per cent.
The other sectors like retail and hospitality services sectors saw visitor arrivals at 946,000 or up 30 per cent, beating the consensus forecast hands down.
This was the highest ever recorded in the month of May when most market pundits always caution a 'Sell in May and Go Away'.
I would expect the momentum of strong GDP growth to continue into the second half of this year and put our economy on course to exceed the last GDP peak in 2007 by 10 - 15 per cent in 2010.
How should investors position their investment portfolios then for 2H 2010 and 2011? Play the office recovery theme: One of the earliest investment themes when I became a stockbroker in 1990 was the takeover tussle of Singapore Land and Malayan Credit (now known as MCL).
Not only did I make good money for my clients and myself betting on the outcome (certainly more predictable than betting on the recent FIFA World Cup), I learned that office demand is highly leveraged to corporate profitability, fresh hiring and corporate expansion, all of which I expect to dig deeper into next year.
There has been a sharp pick-up in hiring activities since the beginning of the year as well as expected hiring activities particularly in the banking and financial services sector.
There are reports on ANZ planning to expand by another 500 headcount over the next 12 months as it scales up its businesses from recently-acquired RBS; Citigroup and HSBC both intending to hire another 200 positions as they recover from the global financial crisis.
Moreover, other major banking institutions like UBS and Bank of Singapore (the former ING Asia) are also looking to hire another 400 and 100 people respectively.
The other critical factor to watch is the turnaround in office rentals.
The inflexion point could have been reached in Q2 2010 after 11 consecutive quarters of rental decline which saw prime rental fall like a bomb from $18.50 psf in Q3 2007 to $5.75 to $6.25 psf in Q2 2010.
Coupled with lower vacancy rates of 10 per cent (from a trough of 12 per cent), I would expect my hot stock picks of Keppel Land, CapitaCommercial Trust, Suntec Reit and KReit (all of which have seen share prices surge by an average of 33 to 50 per cent from current year's lows) for my clients' and my own investment portfolios, to continue to do well into 2011. Go where the tourists go: One of my best returns (in excess of 80 per cent) in my clients' and my own portfolios in 2009 was investing in the casino stocks of Wynn Macau, SJM Holdings and Sands China as tourists and punters flew, sail and rode to Macau where casino revenues soared to 50 per cent of Macau's GDP.
I think this will happen to Singapore this year and well into 2011.
Singapore tourist arrivals will be bolstered further in 2H 2010 by the inaugural Youth Olympics this month, Formula One in September and various new mega business conventions staged at the Marina Bay Sands and Resorts World Sentosa as well as Universal Studio's new thrill rides.
I believe the highest tourist arrival of 946,000 in May 2010 marked another inflexion point in the Singapore tourism, retail and service industries as I expect a structural change to permutate through the new decade with the opening of the two casinos and stabilisation of Asian economies after the global financial crisis.
In this regard, I will continue to stay with beneficiaries like CapitaMall Trust, Frasers CT, CDL HT, M1, Singtel, StarHub, SMRT, SPH and SingPost as tourists are likely to continue to fly, sail and ride to Singapore, a vibrant world-class city. The Empire Strikes Back: One idea I hold close to my heart as an investor (and also now in my philanthropy work) has been to always love the unloved and touch the untouchable stocks which have fallen out-of-favour, ignored by the investment community (which in my view, suffers from short-transom, is very fickle and too driven by corporate profitability) or have earnings blips.
My big winner this year thus far for my clients and myself were the Jardine empire group of companies. JMH, JSH, Jardine C&C, Dairy Farm and Hong Kong Land are easily the largest of the top 30 companies listed on the Singapore Exchange.
For years, they were largely ignored by investors, and not surprisingly, only two stockbrokers have research coverage on them.
Up till the beginning of this year, JMH traded at US$30 and JSH traded at US$17. Upon the release of its Q1 2010 better-than-expected results, JMH has traded up to US$40 and JSH traded up to US$24, registering stupendous gains of 33 per cent and 41 per cent respectively.
There are still many dark horses in the current market environment like the Jardine empire to be unearthed by thorough and consistent research and coverage.
The smart investor should always be looking for an 'empire strikes back' kind of stock. It was Ezra, Midas Holdings and OSIM last year.
So do come to the INVESTFair for more information and possible tips.

Is there a property bubble in China?


Business Times - 20 Aug 2010


There may be a visible slowdown in housing starts and construction towards the end of this year, KELVIN TAY believes
THRUST centre stage as a result of the decline in the G-7 economies in a post-2008 credit crisis world, the Chinese economy has gained a new level of significance and scrutiny that often generates unwanted, alarmist racket.
Is there a property bubble in China? The answer bears more significance now than ever before. China's construction and real estate sectors are likely to contribute to an estimated 11 per cent of its GDP in 2010. The construction industry employs 14.3 per cent of all workers in urban areas and consumes 40 per cent of all steel and lumber produced in China.
The private residential sector currently accounts for almost 40 per cent of the buildings completed by the construction industry. Never before has the health of the Chinese construction and real estate sectors been more closely followed.
Analysing a large, diverse economy like China's is complex, to say the least. Her sheer size and diversity in terms of economic development makes nationwide average figures rather meaningless. For example, from April 2009 to April 2010, residential property prices in China rose by 15 per cent and when juxtaposed with the price declines in 2008, would hardly set alarm bells ringing.
However, a closer examination of tier 1 cities revealed that in the 12-month period to April 2010, property prices rose by 64 per cent in Beijing, 39 per cent in Shanghai and actually doubled in Shenzhen.
The tier 1 cities accounted for almost 22 per cent of urban residential property sales, rather disproportionate to their share of 8 per cent of total floor space. Prices in Beijing reached a stratospheric 28,000 yuan per square metre in the same period.
Although long documented trends of urbanisation, rural to urban migration and a shortfall in the supply of public housing have resulted in property prices in China rising steadily over the last five years, what actually fuelled the extraordinary climb in prices over the last 12 months has largely been attributed to the increasing participation of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the property market.
Higher price
A study conducted by researchers from the National University of Singapore and Tsinghai University found that the transaction price of land tends to be 27.4 per cent higher when it is successfully bid by an SOE.
In certain cities like Beijing, the local and central SOEs' share of developers' land purchases have reached an estimated 71 per cent in early 2010, up from about 37 per cent in 2003.
Leverage, another indication of whether an asset bubble is building, has also seen a steady increase. If we assume that only urban households have access to mortgage lending, then mortgage debt as a proportion of urban household income is near 50 per cent, which makes it a tad uncomfortable.
We also need to take into consideration that in the case of China, where a large share of household wealth exists in the form of bank deposits, it is vulnerable to various forms of asset bubbles as and when households decide to shift a certain proportion to other asset classes, including property.
Although property purchases require a larger amount of capital (initial down payment), it is clearly not a major obstacle, especially in a period when property prices are escalating and return expectations get artificially inflated.
In that sense, we view the property tightening measures announced by the Chinese government in May with measured relief.
The policies are largely aimed at stabilising the market by curbing speculative demand and at the same time, increasing the supply of housing, in particular public housing.
At this stage of its economic cycle, a slowdown in China's property market is very much welcome news. If the Chinese real estate sector continues to grow at breakneck speed with little breathing space, it would certainly magnify the risk of overheating followed by a systemic collapse. This would have serious ramifications for Asia, including Singapore.
A collapse in China's property market resulting in financial contagion might affect the Singapore property market both directly and indirectly. As of July this year, Chinese nationals are currently the second largest source of foreign buyers of property in Singapore. Any crash in China's property market and subsequent economic slowdown would probably change that equation.
Furthermore, over the past two decades, systemic crises have always negatively impacted Singapore's property market. The Asian financial crisis in July 1997, Nasdaq crash in March 2000 and the credit crisis in 2008 all resulted in double-digit declines in the local property market.
However, it is the indirect impact that is actually more worrying. Since 2007, almost all home loans in Singapore are based on floating rates. Mortgage rates are usually pegged to the three-month Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (Sibor) or three-month Singapore Offered Rate (SOR), plus a premium that ranges between 1.25 per cent and 1.75 per cent.
Spike
Therefore, if Sibor or SOR spikes up suddenly and remains at stubbornly elevated levels for a period of time, property owners tied to such loans might suddenly find their monthly mortgages taking up a disproportionate amount of their monthly income.
Have there been instances when Sibor suddenly behaved erratically? The Asian financial crisis was one such example. Sibor spiked up to a high of 7.75 per cent before finally sliding to 1.9 per cent in December 1998. The average rate of Sibor during that 18-month period hovered at 4.9 per cent. As Asia was fortunately not at the epicentre of the credit crisis in 2008, Sibor did not behave erratically but averaged around 1.3 per cent, more than twice the current rate of 0.56 per cent.
So what is the likelihood of the above scenario panning out? Fortunately, we believe the chances are slim. The sharp appreciation in property prices in China have been largely restricted to the tier 1 cities, leaving the fundamentals of the broader market intact.
Although we do not expect China's property sector or economic growth to collapse, we believe that there may be a rather visible slowdown in housing starts and construction towards the end of this year, with any possibility of a reversal of the property tightening measures and/or loosening in monetary policy likely to be in early 2011. We believe this could potentially be the catalyst for the Shanghai A-Share Composite index, which is currently the worst performing stock market in Asia ex-Japan, to outperform.

China's Japanese debt buying spree soars


Aug 10, 2010

It bought 7 times previous full-year record in first half
TOKYO: China bought 456.7 billion yen (S$7.1 billion) worth of Japanese debt in June, Japan's Finance Ministry said yesterday, as Beijing further surpasses its previous full-year buying record.
For the first half of the year, China bought 1.73 trillion yen worth of debt, nearly seven times the full-year record of 253.8 billion yen in 2005.
In May alone, China bought a net 735.2 billion yen in Japanese government bonds, exceeding the 541 billion yen purchased in the four months previously.
China has sought to diversify its vast investments away from the United States and Europe since the onset of the financial crisis.
Most of the bonds bought by China are thought to be used by the government to manage its foreign reserves.
The increase coincides with renewed doubts about the pace of recovery in the US and Europe, and indicates that China is putting more of its swelling foreign exchange reserves into relatively stable Japanese bonds as a result, say analysts.
Japan's risk of default is perceived to be much lower than that for debt-hit Greece or other eurozone countries, even though its gross public debt is nearing 200 per cent of its gross domestic product, the highest among developed countries.
With around 95 per cent held by domestic investors, Japanese bonds are seen as a relatively safe bet.
China's foreign exchange reserves have ballooned in recent years.
The reserves, already the world's largest, grew 25.2 per cent to a record US$2.447 trillion (S$3.305 trillion) at the end of March from US$1.954 trillion a year earlier, the People's Bank of China said in April.
One way Beijing has diversified its investments is through sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp, which manages around US$300 billion and has been investing heavily in resources companies.
Separately, a former senior Bank of Japan official said the yen's current rise is too rapid and may prompt the Japanese authorities to step up their verbal warnings.
Mr Eiji Hirano said Tokyo, however, is unlikely to be able to convince the US and Europe of the need to intervene in markets to weaken the yen.
'If the pace of the yen's rise is too fast, Japan may try to check it by showing its readiness to intervene,' said Mr Hirano.
'But current foreign exchange levels are the natural reflection of changing monetary policies in the United States and Europe and the fact Japan has not changed its policy. Japan is thus unlikely to obtain other nations' consent for launching a solo intervention.'
The US dollar yesterday bounced back to around 85.40 yen after hitting an eight-month trough of 85.02 yen last Friday. However, traders say it has room to fall again on expectations the US Federal Reserve could ease monetary policy even further as early as this week.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, REUTERS

Wheat prices rocket on Russia export ban



Weather forecasts from Russia point to a continuation of the drought
(LONDON) Wheat prices struck two-year highs last week as major exporter Russia banned grain exports after a record drought and fires ravaged its crop.
Markets shook off news that the US economy shed more jobs than expected in July.
Some 131,000 jobs were lost and the unemployment rate remained stuck at 9.5 per cent, the US government said on Friday last week.
The figures were seen as yet another sign that the US economic recovery was stagnating and that the country's employment market may take years to get back on its feet.
Grains and soya: Wheat prices soared in the wake of the decision by Russia - the world's third biggest exporter - to ban exports until the end of 2010.
Wheat futures struck US$7.89 a bushel (about 25 kg) on Friday in Chicago trade - the highest level since late 2008.
'Concerns on the impact of drought on Russian wheat production . . . is dominating market focus,' said Barclays Capital analyst Sudakshina Unnikrishnan.
'Weather forecasts from Russia point to the continuation of drought and the market focus remains on Russian wheat export potential and how lowered supply prospects will feed into global wheat production and trade balances,' she added.
Russia has seen 10 million hectares of arable land destroyed in the heatwave and the government has warned that grain production this year will be lower than annual domestic demand at 70-75 million tonnes.
'It is going to interrupt trade and create instability in the market . . . a situation which was not serious has now become serious,' said Abdolreza Abbassian, economist and secretary of the Intergovernmental Group on Grains at the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).
'It was a very quick and unexpected decision,' he told AFP in Rome.
Crucially, the government decree to ban exports also stated that the decision should be matched by its partners in a regional customs union, Belarus and Kazakhstan.
Kazakhstan is a major player on global grain markets and officials in Astana said its position could be made clear this week.
Analysts at Commerzbank said the United States could be a key beneficiary of the crisis.
'The US, in particular, might benefit from this, because it once again had a good wheat harvest and it also has sufficient wheat inventories,' they wrote in a research note.
By Friday on the Chicago Board of Trade, wheat for delivery in September had jumped to US$7.69 a bushel from US$6.61 the previous week.
Maize for December rose to US$4.12 a bushel from US$4.06.
November-dated soyabean meal - used in animal feed - increased to US$10.30 from US$10.05.
Oil: Crude oil prices rose sharply to three-month highs above US$82, with sentiment boosted by soaring global stock markets, strong bank results and solid US economic data at the start of the week.
Traders meanwhile shrugged off downbeat economic news in China, which is the world's second biggest energy-consuming nation after the United States.
'Oil prices ran higher on the expectation that improving economic conditions will bring about energy demand growth,' said Mike Fitzpatrick of MF Global.
But he warned that 'financial markets can clearly run ahead of economic reality, as has been demonstrated time after time'.
By late Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange, Texas light sweet crude for delivery in September had rallied to US$81.91 a barrel from US$77.67 the previous week.
On London's Intercontinental Exchange, Brent North Sea crude for September jumped to US$81.30 compared with US$77.04.
Precious metals: Prices advanced across the board.
'The entire precious metals complex posted gains . . . as equity markets regained upward momentum, (on) positive macro data and the euro made further gains against the dollar,' said Barclays Capital analyst Suki Cooper.
By late Friday on the London Bullion Market, gold advanced to US$1,207.75 an ounce from US$1,169.
Silver rose to US$18.30 an ounce from US$17.66.
On the London Platinum and Palladium Market, platinum climbed to US$1,571 an ounce from US$1,555.
Palladium increased to US$491 an ounce from US$487. -- AFP

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Fidelity investment's Lynch urges charity


(BOSTON) Famed investor Peter Lynch, whose knack for picking winning companies helped millions of Americans make fortunes in stocks, is now urging the wealthy to follow his lead anew and give a lot of it back. To charity, that is.
'People who have been much luckier than everyone else should do more of the giving,' Mr Lynch, a vice-chairman at Fidelity Investments and trustee of the Lynch Foundation, said in a telephone interview.
The 66-year-old money manager, who earned his fortune by running Fidelity Investment's Magellan stock fund for more than a decade, is echoing the call to action billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates made only days ago when they urged other billionaires to part with a chunk of their money.
'I hope it makes people think more of giving,' he said of Mr Buffett and Mr Gate's suggestion that other billionaires consider donating half their net worth.
Mr Lynch and his wife, Carolyn, announced on Sunday that they are making a US$20 million donation - their biggest ever - to support a programme to train principals at Boston College, the money manager's alma mater.
In the two decades since retiring from Magellan, Mr Lynch has stuck to what worked best for him - picking common stocks to make his foundation's money grow.
At Fidelity, Mr Lynch turned Magellan fund into a household name and the world's best performing mutual fund by increasing its value 700 times from US$20 million in 1977 to US$14 billion in 1990. Later, he wrote best-selling books that sent generations of Americans into equities.
Known for his shock of white hair and common sense approach to investing, Mr Lynch kept things simple by buying companies whose products he and his family used, like General Electric and the auto company Ford .
He also coined such axioms as 'Behind every stock is a company. Find out what it's doing.' Since retiring from running Magellan where the father of three routinely worked every weekend, Mr Lynch said he has concentrated on investing his foundation's money and mentoring younger analysts and portfolio managers at Fidelity.
'I'm like their older brother,' Mr Lynch said about guiding newcomers at the privately owned mutual fund giant in Boston.
His interest in passing on knowledge is now being spread very tangibly to education, long a favourite cause for Mr Lynch and his wife, who met as students at the University of Pennsylvania.
Discussing the project, Mr Lynch ticked of statistics making him sound exactly like the stock picker whose talent for numbers helped his investors earn a market-beating 29.2 per cent return at Magellan.
'The penalty of being a high school dropout is severe,' he said, laying out the low probability that people who do not finish high school face in finding decent work as the nation's unemployment rate hovers just below 10 per cent.
While Carolyn Lynch - whose father was a high school principal - runs the couple's foundation and searches for worthy causes, it is Peter Lynch's job as head of the investment committee to keep the millions growing.
According to 2008 IRS documents - the year the financial crisis decimated stocks - the Lynch Foundation had US$64 million. Documents for the previous year show US$113 million in 2007.
Over the years, Mr Lynch, who was sometimes seen in the Fidelity offices wearing sandals and holding his dog on a leash, hasn't changed much in the way he picks stocks. 'It is 99 per cent common stocks,' he said about how he invests the foundation's money.
But his frenetic work schedule has slowed over the years.'I don't work on Saturdays anymore,' he said.
Lynch also acknowledged lagging in the technological revolution and joked that his children had to teach him how to use a cell phone.
While sounding still very much like the stock picker he is, Mr Lynch also sounded like the philanthropist he has become in the last two decades. 'We are trying to make a difference where it counts,' he and his wife agreed.
Long ago, the Lynches - who have been married for 42 years - made education their cornerstone cause, supporting programmes like Teach for America and institutions ranging from Harvard Medical School to Marian High School in Framingham, Massachusetts.
The Lynches said they hope the programme to train principals will be duplicated in other cities around the country and eventually help narrow the divide between some of America's top-notch universities and what many call a crumbling public school system. -- Reuters

Lu Li


Twenty-one years ago, Li Lu was a student leader of the Tiananmen Square protests. Now a hedge-fund manager, he is in line to become a successor to Warren Buffett at Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK-B - News).

Mr. Li, 44 years old, has emerged as a leading candidate to run a chunk of Berkshire's $100 billion portfolio, stemming from a close friendship with Charlie Munger, Berkshire's 86-year-old vice chairman. In an interview, Mr. Munger revealed that Mr. Li was likely to become one of the top Berkshire investment officials. "In my mind, it's a foregone conclusion," Mr. Munger said.

The job of filling Mr. Buffett's shoes is among the most high-profile succession stories in modern corporate history. Mr. Buffett, who will turn 80 in a month, says he has no current plans to step down and will likely split his job after he leaves the company into separate CEO and investing functions. Mr. Li's emergence as a contender to oversee Berkshire investments is the first time a name has been identified to fill the investment part of Mr. Buffett's legendary role.
The development illustrates that Berkshire is moving toward putting in place—possibly sooner than investors anticipated—certain aspects of its succession plan.

The Chinese-American investor already has made money for Berkshire: He introduced Mr. Munger to BYD Co., a Chinese battery and auto maker, and Berkshire invested. Since 2008, Berkshire's BYD stake has surged more than six-fold, generating profit of about $1.2 billion, Mr. Buffett says. Mr. Li's hedge funds have garnered an annualized compound return of 26.4% since 1998, compared to 2.25% for the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index during the same period.
Mr. Li's ascent on Wall Street has been no less dramatic. He spent his childhood shuttling between foster families after his mother and father were sent to labor camps during the Cultural Revolution. After the Tiananmen Square protest, he escaped to France and came to the U.S. Investors in his hedge fund have included a group of senior U.S. business executives and the musician Sting, who calls Mr. Li "hardworking and clever."
Mr. Li's investing strategy represents a significant shift for Mr. Buffett: Mr. Li invests chiefly in high-technology companies in Asia. Mr. Buffett typically has ignored investments in industries he says he doesn't understand.
Mr. Buffett says Berkshire's top investing job could be filled by two or more managers who would be on equal footing and divide up responsibility for managing Berkshire's $100 billion portfolio. David Sokol, chairman of Berkshire unit MidAmerican Energy Holdings, is considered top contender for CEO. Mr. Sokol, 53, joined MidAmerican in 1991 and is known for his tireless work ethic.

In an interview, Mr. Buffett declines to comment directly on succession plans. But he doesn't rule out bringing in an investment manager such as Mr. Li while still at Berkshire's helm.
"I like the idea of bringing on other investment managers while I'm still here," Mr. Buffett says. He says he doesn't preclude making a move this year, though he adds that there is no "goal" to bring on an additional manager that quickly either. Mr. Buffett says he envisions a team approach in which the Berkshire investment officials would be "paid as a group" from one pot, he says. "I don't want them to compete."
Mr. Li fits the bill in some important ways, Mr. Buffett says. "You want someone" who "can think about problems that haven't yet existed before," he says. Mr. Li is a contrarian investor, loading up on BYD shares when they were beaten down. And he's a big fan of Berkshire, which may also help his cause. "We don't want them unless they have special feelings about Berkshire," Mr. Buffett says.
But hiring Mr. Li could be risky. His big bet on BYD is his only large-scale investing home run. Without the BYD profits, his performance as a hedge-fund manager is unremarkable.
It's unclear whether he could rack up such profits if managing a large portfolio of Berkshire's.
What's more, his strategy of "backing up the truck," to make large investments and not wavering when the markets turn down could backfire in a prolonged bear market. Despite a 200% return in 2009, he was down 13% at the end of June this year, nearly double the 6.6% drop in the S&P-500 during the period.
Mr. Li declines to discuss a potential Berkshire position, saying only that he feels fortunate to be a member of the Berkshire inner circle. "This is the stuff you can't conjure in dreams," he says.
Mr. Li was born in 1966, the year Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution began. When he was nine months old, he says, his father, an engineer, was sent to a coal mine to be "re-educated." His mother was sent to a labor camp. Mr. Li's parents paid various families to take him in. He was shuttled from family to family for several years until moving in with an illiterate coal miner, with whom he developed a close bond, in his hometown of Tangshan. Living apart from his family as a child taught him survival skills, Mr. Li says.
He was reunited with his family, including two brothers, by age 10, when a massive earthquake hit his hometown, killing an estimated 242,000 people in the area, including the coal miner and his family. His nuclear family was spared, he says, but "most of the people I knew were killed."
At the time, he says he had no direction and was fighting in the streets. Mr. Li says his grandmother, who was among the first women in her city to attend college, inspired him to begin reading and studying. He later attended Nanjing University, majoring in physics.
In April 1989, he traveled to Tiananmen Square in Beijing to meet with students who were gathering to mourn the death of Secretary General Hu Yaobang, who was viewed as a supporter of democracy and reforms.
The students protested against corruption, among other things, and Mr. Li helped organize the students and participated in a hunger strike.
He and other students fled to France. Later in 1989, he traveled to the U.S. to speak at Columbia University, where human-rights activists embraced him as a hero. He spoke little English but landed an advance to write a book about his experiences.
Helped by financial scholarships at Columbia, Mr. Li quickly learned English. He simultaneously earned three degrees: an economics degree, a law degree and a graduate degree in business, according to Columbia.
With his student loans piling up, Mr. Li attended a lecture by Mr. Buffett at Columbia in 1993. At the time, the 1990s bull market was in full swing, and hedge funds were on the rise. Mr. Li says in China he didn't trust financial markets but hearing Mr. Buffett helped him overcome skepticism about stock investing.
He began dabbling in stocks using money from his book advance. By his graduation in 1996, he had built a sizable nest egg and says he thought he could retire. Instead he took a job at securities firm Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette and then left to set up his own hedge fund. In 1997, he had set up Himalaya Partners, a hedge fund. Later he started a venture-capital fund to invest in U.S. technology companies.
It was a heady time on Wall Street. The Internet boom was beginning. Investors were clamoring to find hot stocks.
Through his human-rights contacts, Mr. Li quickly attracted well-heeled clients including Bob Bernstein, former chairman of Random House and founder of Human Rights Watch as well as the musician Sting. Other investors included financier Jerome Kohlberg, News Corp. director emeritus and Allen & Co. executive Stanley Shuman and hedge fund manager Jack Nash, Mr. Li says.
But Mr. Li bombed out in 1998, his first year as a hedge fund manager. His fund, which was invested chiefly in Asian stocks, was hammered by the Asian debt crisis, and lost 19%.
"I felt bad that people had trusted me," he says. "All they knew was I was a student activist and all they saw was losses."
His fortunes rebounded as the Asian crisis quickly faded. As 1998 began, so did a huge new bull market. By now, the hedge-fund industry was growing gangbusters, and by the end of 1999, Mr. Li's fund had regained its losses.
In 2002, hedge-fund giant Julian Robertson gave Mr. Li money to invest in his fund on the condition that the fund would make bearish as well as bullish bets on companies.
It wasn't a good fit. Mr. Li says he "hated" betting against stocks, complaining that he had to "trade all the time" to adjust his portfolio. (The remaining parts of the fund now are being unwound.) Mr. Robertson declined to comment on the business relationship.
One of Mr. Li's human-rights contacts was Jane Olson, the wife of Ronald Olson, a Berkshire director and early partner at a Los Angeles law firm Mr. Munger helped found. Mr. Li began spending time at the Olsons' weekend home in Santa Barbara, Calif., and on Thanksgiving 2003 met Mr. Munger, whose home is nearby.
Mr. Munger says Mr. Li made an immediate impression. The two shared a "suspicion of reported earnings of finance companies," Mr. Munger says. "We don't like the bull—."
Mr. Munger gave Mr. Li some of his family's nest egg to invest to open a "value" fund betting on beaten-down stocks.
Two weeks later, Mr. Li says he met again with Mr. Munger to make certain he had heard right. In early 2004, Mr. Li opened a fund, putting in $4 million of his own money and raising an additional $50 million from other investors. Mr. Munger's family put in $50 million, followed by another $38 million. Part of Mr. Li's agreement with Mr. Munger was that the fund would be closed to new investors.
Mr. Li's big hit began in 2002 when he first invested in BYD, then a fledgling Chinese battery company. Its founder came from humble beginnings and started the company in 1995 with $300,000 of borrowed money.
Mr. Li made an initial investment in BYD soon after its initial public offering on the Hong Kong stock exchange. (BYD trades in the U.S. on the Pink Sheets and was recently quoted at $6.90 a share.)
When he opened the fund, he loaded up again on BYD shares, eventually investing a significant share of the $150 million fund with Mr. Munger in BYD, which already was growing quickly and had bought a bankrupt Chinese automaker. "He bought a little early and more later when the stock fell, which is his nature," Mr. Munger says.
In 2008, Mr. Munger persuaded Mr. Sokol to investigate BYD for Berkshire as well. Mr. Sokol went to China and when he returned, he and Mr. Munger convinced Mr. Buffett to load up on BYD. In September, Berkshire invested $230 million in BYD for a 10% stake in the company.
BYD's business has been on fire. It now has close to one-third of the global market for lithium-ion batteries, used in cell phones. Its bigger plans involve the electric and hybrid-vehicle business.
The test for BYD, one of the largest Chinese car makers, will be whether it can deliver on plans to develop the most effective lithium battery on the market that could become an even bigger source of power in the future. Even more promising is the potential to use the lithium battery to store power from other energy sources like solar and wind.
Says Mr. Munger: "The big lithium battery is a game-changer."
BYD is a big roll of the dice for Mr. Li. He is an informal adviser to the company and owns about 2.5% of the company.
Mr. Li's fund's $40 million investment in BYD is now worth about $400 million. Berkshire's $230 million investment in 2008 now is worth about $1.5 billion. Messrs. Buffett, Munger, Sokol, Li and Microsoft founder and Berkshire Director Bill Gates plan to visit China and BYD in September.
Mr. Li is able to travel in China on a limited basis today, but he hopes to regain full travel privileges soon. It isn't clear how he is viewed by the Chinese government.
Mr. Li declined to name his fund's other holdings. Despite this year's losses, the $600 million fund is up 338% since its late 2004 launch, an annualized return of around 30%, compared to less than 1% for the S&P 500 index.
Mr. Li told investors he took a lesson from watching the World Cup, comparing his investment style to soccer. "You may very well work extremely hard and seldom score," he says. "But occasionally—very occasionally—you get one or two great chances and you make decisive strikes that really matter."

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Temasek report may reveal extent of asset shift, succession


Business Times - 07 Jul 2010

It has been expanding into energy, commodities and agriculture
SINGAPORE wealth fund Temasek Holdings is expected to show the extent of its portfolio shift towards the resources sector and may provide clues about leadership changes when unveiling its annual report for 2009/10 this week.
The world's eighth-largest sovereign wealth fund may also respond to speculation that Singapore funds are in talks with BP Plc to take a strategic stake in the oil major as it struggles with a devastating oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico.
Temasek declined to comment on the speculation yesterday. With $172 billion in assets as at end-July 2009, Temasek could also reveal this month that it fared better for the year ended March 31 after assets fell 30 per cent in the prior year as the global financial crisis struck.
It has been expanding aggressively into energy, commodities and agriculture. Financials and telecoms, however, still account for the biggest share of its holdings.
'Temasek's move to resources is consistent with its goal of catering to Asia's emerging middle class,' said Melvyn Teo, director of the BNP Paribas Hedge Fund Centre at the Singapore Management University.
'Demand for resources will go up because of emerging economies like China but there is only so much supply, so prices will go up over time.'
The fund's recent investments include convertible preferred stock in US natural gas firm Chesapeake Energy and India's GMR Energy, and shares in Canadian platinum producer Platmin.
Singbridge, a wholly owned unit of Temasek, may invest in a $16 billion agricultural project in north-eastern China that would produce corn and soyabean for Chinese consumers and export pork, beef and dairy products to countries such as Japan, South Korea and Singapore.
According to Temasek's report for the year ended March 2009, the fund held about 5 per cent of its assets in energy and resources, unchanged from March 2008. That proportion could have risen to around 8 per cent by March 10 involving additional investment of about $4 billion, analysts said.
In 2009, investments in financial services comprised 33 per cent of the fund, while telecommunications and media made up 26 per cent.
The fund came in for some criticism last year over its loss-making investments in Western banks such as Bank of America/ Merrill Lynch and Barclays.
But things would have looked better for Temasek in the latest year as stock markets improved. MSCI's world equity index jumped 56 per cent in the 12 months to March 2010, while the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index gained 74 per cent.
Temasek may provide cues about when current CEO Ho Ching is expected to step down and who her successor might be.
Ms Ho was scheduled to leave Temasek in October last year but her designated successor, former BHP Billiton CEO Charles Goodyear, left in July, citing differences in strategy.
Temasek said in May that former Singapore Exchange CEO Hsieh Fu Hua would join Temasek as executive director and president in August to assist Ms Ho in areas such as talent development and succession planning.
Temasek may also shed more light on how it plans to build up Seatown, a multi-billion-dollar investment firm it set up earlier this year with staff seconded from Temasek. Sources said that Seatown aims to raise funds from external investors to earn fees as well as show foreign governments that Temasek was a financial investor with no political agenda. Seatown, the English word for 'Temasek', will in time allow ordinary Singaporeans to co-invest with the firm.
'I really hope to see more information about Seatown, as it adds an extra dimension to how Temasek is set up,' said SMU's Mr Teo. -- Reuters

MM Lee: Invest in China with confidence, guanxi


Business Times - 13 Jul 2010

(SINGAPORE) Singaporeans looking to invest in China should do so with confidence and the requisite 'guanxi', said Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew at the FutureChina Global Forum last night.
'Singapore's businessmen are largely welcomed in China. Many Chinese officials from the various provinces come to Singapore for training in urban management, and they understand that Singapore has a clean system,' he said in Mandarin.
'Some people say that Taiwanese are 'wu qing' (merciless), Hong Kong's people are 'wu chi' (shameless) and Singaporeans are 'wu zhi' (ignorant). But it is the ignorant that people feel are honest and reliable,' he said to much laughter from the 500 businessmen, government officials, academics and representatives of civil society present at the dinner dialogue.
The FutureChina Global Forum, organised by Business China in celebration of 20 years of diplomatic ties between Singapore and China, hopes to build a 'community of insiders' from business, political, academic, technological and cultural fields which might then hold annual or biennial gatherings here to share insights on China's developments, said Business China chairman Chua Thian Poh.
During the hour-long dialogue moderated by Singapore Press Holdings senior executive vice-president Robin Hu, Mr Lee fielded questions in both English and Mandarin on issues ranging from China's foreign relations, domestic political succession and political system, to the rising giant's relations with Singapore.
In response to a question on what Singapore might best teach China, Mr Lee said: 'Singapore is a small country, we cannot presume to teach other countries. If the Chinese are interested in certain aspects of how Singapore does things and request that we show them, of course we will do that, but we are a small country and would not have the audacity to instruct.'
'How can a population of four million teach a population of 1.3 billion how to eat rice?' he added, drawing laughs from the audience.
But there is room for mutual learning, especially between the younger generations. 'What can we learn from each other? Well, we have quite a number of mainland Chinese immigrants. They are very hardworking, they are very serious, their children do well in schools, giving our children enormous competition, that's good incentive for our children to do better,' Mr Lee said.
'What can we teach the Chinese? Bilingualism - understanding the world without translation. English is the second language of all countries that do not have it as their first language. Without it, you are at a disadvantage,' said Mr Lee. China needs to have 10 to 20 per cent of its population speaking English to create an English-speaking environment, he said.
The fundamental difference between the younger generations of Chinese in China and those in Singapore though, is one of mindset. 'We are in South-east Asia, and our outlook on any strategic issue must be from a South-east Asian point of view. They (the Chinese) are part of a huge continent and on their way to becoming a colossal power, so we start off from two different scales,' Mr Lee said.