TIP517: MOHNISH PABRAI’S

DHANDHO INVESTMENT FRAMEWORK

21 January 2023

On today’s episode, Clay Finck reviews Mohnish Pabrai’s book, The Dhandho Investor.

Mohnish is one of our very favorite investors to study here at TIP as we’ve interviewed him for the podcast multiple times in the past. Since its inception in 2000, Mohnish’s flagship fund has achieved a return of 781% to his investors net of fees versus 378% for the S&P 500. 

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • The 9 Dhandho investment principles.
  • How Dhandho investors are able to earn outsized returns with minimal risk.
  • How to identify bargains in the market.
  • The story of the Patel’s, who went from owning nothing in the US, to owning over 50% of the motel industry.
  • The relationship between investing and gambling.
  • Mohnish’s investing checklist he uses prior to purchasing a company.
  • Clay’s analysis on Mohnish’s largest US equity holding today.

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

[00:00:03] Clay Finck: Hey everyone. Welcome to The Investor’s Podcast. I’m your host, Clay Finck. I’m very excited for today’s episode because I’m going to be covering the investing strategy of Mohnish Pabrai. Mohnish is one of our very favorite investors to learn from here at The Investor’s Podcast Network, as he’s been a guest on our show a number of times over the years for Preston, Stig, and William.

[00:00:24] Since inception in 2000, Mohnish’s flagship fund returned 781% to his investors’ net of fees relative to only 378% for the S&P 500. For much of this episode, I’ll be covering my biggest takeaways from reading his book, The Dhandho Investor, which was published back in 2000.

[00:00:45] During this episode, you’ll learn the nine Dhandho investment principles, why Dhandho investors are able to earn outsize returns with minimal risk, how to find bargains in the market, the story of the Patels who went from owning nothing in the US to managing 50% of the motel industry in just 35 years. Why Dhando love arbitrage opportunities, how investing relates to gambling, Mohnish’s seven criteria he goes through before purchasing a company and so much more.

[00:01:17] At the end of the episode, I’ll be discussing Mohnish’s Holdings in his portfolio today, most notably Micron. With that, I hope you enjoyed today’s episode, covering investing great Mohnish Pabrai.

[00:01:33] Intro: You are listening to The Investor’s Podcast, where we study the financial markets and read the books that influence self-made billionaires the most. We keep you informed and prepared for the unexpected.

[00:01:53] Clay Finck: Warren Buffett has famously said that he’s a better investor because he is a businessman and a better businessman because he’s an investor. And Mohnish states that the Dhandho investor is the expansion of that one sentence into a book, diving into that idea.

[00:02:09] So up until just recently, I had no idea what a Dhandho investor. I had first learned about it through reading TIP’s investment newsletter called We Study Markets, and knew I had to give this book a read, given that it was written by Mohnish. If by chance y­ou aren’t yet subscribed to TIP’s newsletter, We Study Markets, you can do so by simply going to theinvestorspodcast.com/newsletter.

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[00:02:34] If you’re interested in staying up to date with markets and just personal development as an investor, I highly recommend you go subscribe at theinvestorpodcast.com/newsletter. All right, so now the Dhandho Investor is simply an approach to business that has minimal risk but maximum reward, meaning that if you win, you win big, and if you lose, you may only lose a little.

[00:02:59] Said another way. The Dhandho style of investing in business is taking asymmetric bets that give you disproportionate upside relative to the downside. An important part of this is minimizing the downside because Buffett says that the number one rule to invest is to not lose money. And rule number two is obviously to not forget rule number one.

[00:03:19] We’ve all been taught that in order to increase returns, you must take greater. But when you study the investors that take this Dhandho approach, they flip this idea totally on its head. Dhandho. Investors have a way of taking on business endeavors that create wealth while taking virtually no risk. Mohnish tells a number of stories of business people who took this Dhandho approach, the first of which was a group of people referred to as the Patel.

[00:03:48] 35 years before this book was published, there were practically no Patels in the United States, and at the time the book was published, the Patels owned more than 40 billion worth of motels paying 725 million in taxes and employed over 1 million people. Over half of the motel industry was owned by the Patels in the United States, despite only being 0.2% of the popul.

[00:04:13] Now the Patels were from a specific area of India near where Gandhi was born. The Patels had their wealth seized, and they were driven out of Uganda at some point, and they were forced to go elsewhere. The United States ended up accepting a few thousand of these families in this group, eventually entered the motel industry.

[00:04:33] When you study immigrants that come to the United States, you oftentimes find that certain ethnic groups tend to stick to a certain profession or certain business. This is because the role models in our life play a big role in the path we end up choosing to follow. If we see someone who did quite well, who had a similar upbringing, attended a similar school, had a similar lifestyle, then it’s natural for us to take a similar path as.

[00:04:58] It’s what we’re most familiar and most comfortable with, which really makes sense from that perspective. Now, why did the Patels enter the motel business specifically? Well after World War II, there was a huge build out of suburban life and interstate highway systems as the automobile became a staple of American life.

[00:05:19] By 1973, the US had entered a recession and the motel industry had taken a downturn, and one of these Patel families saw a huge opportunity after losing practically everything they had in Uganda, and now they were just immigrants to the us. The father of the family was working a minimum wage job, and he figured out that he could purchase this motel largely with debt.

[00:05:42] They would have minimal transportation and living expenses because they could live at the motel and not have to commute for work. So they buy this 20 room motel for $5,000 down and rather than keeping the employees that work to there, they let them all go and the family of five would handle all the operations of the business.

[00:06:03] The competitive advantage that this Patel family created was to be the lowest cost operator and have the same or higher levels of profitability per room than their competitors. Since they were the lowest cost motel, their occupancy rates ended up being much higher than their counterparts. This Patel family’s expenses were abysmally low.

[00:06:24] They spent practically all of their time working and didn’t have time to spend money on recreational activities. They didn’t have a mortgage payment, they weren’t commuting anywhere, and when you’re working all the time, it’s kind of hard to have a lot of expenses, assuming that you’re not spending a ton of money on the business itself.

[00:06:41] To add to that, they were vegetarians and just lived a really simple life, and they just spent a lot of their time just working. The distress price for the motel ended up being $50,000 initially, and after the $5,000 down payment, the motel would bring in $15,000 in annual profit and an additional $5,000 in principle paid on the loan netting the Patels of 400% return on their original investment.

[00:07:08] Turning back to this Dhandho approach, when looking at the motel deal, there was obviously some sort of chance that it would end up. If the economy entered a severe recession and enough business never came in to cover the expenses, then the motel would get foreclosed on. In that sort of situation, the Patels would’ve lost their $5,000 initial investment.

[00:07:31] If the economy does recover though, then the bet pays off tremendously. Say the family netted $20,000 per year for 10 years, and the business is sold for the price it was originally. That would mean this investment would end up being a 21 bagger on their initial purchase price. This summarizes the Dhandho approach.

[00:07:51] Minimal downside was very high, asymmetric upside. Let’s say that there was a 10% chance that this deal wouldn’t work out, and the Patels lost all of their $5,000 that they initially invested. Well, that means if he made this bet twice, then there would be a 1% chance that this sort of arrangement doesn’t work out both times.

[00:08:13] So if the family was willing to take two shots at this and go all in, then there was a 99% chance that it would pay off big in the end. After the first failure, of course, they would of course need to go back and work some sort of minimum wage job to save up the money again, to invest it for the second one.

[00:08:30] And of course, since the first motel ended up being a success for them, the family was eventually flushed with cash and they were able to go out and purchase a bigger deal that was 50 rooms instead of. In the snowball effect started to come into play, which led to the Patels from this specific part of India to own 50% of the motel market in the US in just 35 years.

[00:08:52] Before diving into more of the details on the Dhandho framework, Mohnish also tells his own story of his own Dhandho experience. Mohnish founded a business called TransTech Inc. And when he started the business, he had $30,000 saved up in his 401k and he had $70,000 available in credit card limits. He did some research and discovered that if the business ended up not working out, he could file for bankruptcy and simply wipe out his debts and to make the jump slightly more comforting, his previous employer, he just quit at, told him that they’d love to have him back if his business ended up not working.

[00:09:30] So in Monet’s eyes, he didn’t see much downside in starting a business while he was young, being only 25 years old, and he had this opportunity in front of him that he just really had to seize. He started TransTech part-time in early 1990 while working his full-time job. And then when he quit his full-time job, he had already signed his first client and had $200,000 in annual revenue.

[00:09:55] He actually regarded staying at his full-time job, the risky path in life as when he was in his twenties. It would be the only, you know, shot at life that he had at starting a business as in the later years he would, you know, have a family of his own and starting a business would be much more difficult and likely more risky since his expenses would be much higher.

[00:10:16] So if the business didn’t work out, he would say, loses $30,000 that was in his 401k, and if it did work out well, then it would likely net him millions of dollars at the very least. And once he started getting the business established and he had a few customers and clients on board, he knew the business was then very low risk and was really a no-brainer in his.

[00:10:39] The business model was actually very simple that Mohnish implemented. It was an arbitrage based business model where he leveraged India’s deep expertise in knowledge and client server computing to satisfy the deep shortage of talent in the Midwest in the us. By 1996, his business was recognized in the Ink 500, which represented the 500 fastest growing businesses in the.

[00:11:05] Over the first 10 years, the business went from nothing to over 20 million in revenue and Mohnish never had to take in outside capital. Mohnish says that he ended up selling the business in 2000 for several million dollars. His initial $30,000, he quote unquote, put at risk, had turned into 150 bagger over 10 years, which he states is an annualized return of 65% per.

[00:11:33] When he quit his job, he had a salary of $45,000, and in a few years he was consistently making over $300,000 per year. In Monique’s words, the magic is Dhandho huge upside with virtually no downside. It was a classic heads, eye win tales. I don’t lose much kind of bet. Mohnish then dives into the Dhandho framework, which consists of nine core principles.

[00:11:59] The first principle is to focus on buying an existing business. The stories that Mohnish told at the beginning of the book didn’t include crazy startups. You know, where it’s something like Elon Musk starting Tesla, Jeff Bezos starting Amazon out of his garage, or Steve Jobs creating a new form of computing.

[00:12:20] There were businesses that already existed, and these businesses have been around for a really long time. This is a much less risky business venture than operating a startup. The second principle is to buy simple businesses in industries with an ultra-low rate of change. Warren Buffett once said, we see change as the enemy of investments, so we look for the absence of change.

[00:12:44] We don’t like to lose money in capitalism is pretty brutal. We look for mundane products that everyone needs. The third principle is to buy distressed businesses. In distressed industries, you’re going to get the best deals when business isn’t as good, and the general sentiment is really, really bad. The Patels first got into the motel business during a recession, and the business environment for the industry was really pretty poor because people overall are traveling and they’re spending less because they don’t have as much discretionary.

[00:13:17] As we all know, Buffett likes to be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy. Mohnish states that Dhandho investors intrinsically understand that the very best time to buy a business is when it’s near term. Future prospects are murky and the business is hated and unloved in such circumstances.

[00:13:38] The odds are high that an investor can pick up cheap assets at steep discounts to their underlying. The fourth principle is to buy businesses with a durable, competitive advantage or moat for the Patels and the motel business, this was the ability to charge much less than all of their competitors and still maintain healthy margins.

[00:13:59] Other examples of a competitive advantage is access to resources your competitors don’t have. Having a highly skilled labor force or having a strong brand awareness, the fifth principle is to bet heavily when the odds are in your favor. Again, this ties into the asymmetric upside we mentioned earlier where if you win, you win big, and if you lose, you only lose a relatively small amount.

[00:14:24] Charlie Munger relates this to horse betting. As he says, we look for the horse with one chance and two of winning, which pays you three to one. You’re looking for a mispriced gamble. That’s what investing is, and you have to know enough to know whether the gamble is mispriced. That’s value invest. This reminds me of how Warren Buffett almost always has ample amounts of cash, partly because he had his insurance business and has to have cash available to pay out claims, but also partially to give him that optionality during the great financial crisis, because he had a ton of cash and a ton of other people needed cash, he was able to invest in deals with great terms that earned him outsize returns.

[00:15:08] The sixth principle is to focus on arbitrage. Arbitrage is simply profiting by exploiting price differences in two different markets. Buffett is actually currently in an arbitrage deal as he purchased a stake in Activision. Microsoft is in the works of purchasing Activision and Buffett stated that he plans on exiting the deal and the goal with the investment is to make a profit when the deal closes, which is a strategy known as merger arbitrage.

[00:15:35] In a typical arbitrage play, you just can’t lose. But in this merger, arbitrage for Buffett, there is of course the chance that regulators don’t approve of the deal, and Buffett is stuck holding his shares in Activision, which he very well may be okay with. Arbitrages can be applied to businesses as well. In a way, Mohnish applied this arbitrage concept when he was meeting a need in the marketplace.

[00:15:57] He found labor in India and the demand for labor in the Midwest, and he connected the two, making the decision a no-brainer for both parties. If the arbitrage is so successful and so profitable, then eventually competition will flow in and close the gap on the mispricing in the. Arbitrages can be found when entrepreneurs deliver a product or service to a market that isn’t yet being serviced and has a desire to fill in for that demand.

[00:16:25] Principle number seven is to buy businesses with big discounts to intrinsic value. As we’ve talked about in all of our episodes covering Warren Buffett, you want to purchase a business with a margin of safety to help minimize those chances of you losing money in Buffett’s. Number one rule of investing, as I mentioned, is to not lose money.

[00:16:44] Principle number eight is to look for low risk, high uncertainty businesses. The Patel’s Motel business did not have much risk to it. However, it did have a lot of uncertainty because of the looming recession and how bad the recession would end up actually turning out. The low risk is an obvious sign to look out for if you’ve listened this far into this episode.

[00:17:06] But the reason why high uncertainty is actually desirable is because that is what’s going to give you the depressed price. The market really doesn’t like uncertainty. Monnet has talked about meta stock before and how he believes the company is undervalued. The reason meta stock is so depressed is because there’s a lot of uncertainty going forward, and the market really does not like uncertainty.

[00:17:30] Nobody really knows how much meta will end up spending on the metaverse and how that will end up playing out for them, whether they’ll actually make money or if it will be a huge. Principle number nine is that it’s better to be a copycat than an innovator. The first few Patels in the US paved the way for the remainder to head to the US and enter that business.

[00:17:53] Innovation can be a crap shoe and it’s better to copy what works than to create something new. Moni is actually quite well known for cloning and shamelessly taking the best ideas from the great investors such as Warren Buffett and Charlie Mun. It’s pretty foolish to believe that you need to invent or create something new when you can just simply clone the best ideas that already exist.

[00:18:18] Not a lot of people listening to the show might want to go out and buy or start a business like the Patels did or Mohnish did in the nineties, and this is where the stock market comes into. Ever since the creation of the stock market in 1790, many people have viewed it as a piece of paper whose prices continually race up and race down.

[00:18:40] Mohnish highlights that a far better way to view the stock market is how Benjamin Graham views them, and that’s the ownership of a real business. The stock market allows anyone to own a publicly traded company and benefit from the cash that business creates, just like how the Patels benefited from the cash that was created by their motel business.

[00:19:00] Mohnish then highlights six big advantages that the stock market offers versus buying and selling an entire business. The first advantage is the headache saved When you purchase an entire business, it takes a tremendous amount of energy and dedication in order to make it successful. When you buy a stock, all you need to do is do your research upfront, and you don’t need to go out and find managers to take care of the business of the stock you’re buying.

[00:19:29] You can buy as little, or you can buy as much as you want. You can sell out whenever you’d like with just a few clicks on your computer. The Patels didn’t have this advantage of being able to buy and sell whenever they wanted to. Plus they had to spend, you know, so much time and so much headaches, you know, dealing with the business they had, which also gave them a lot more potential upside and sweat equity as well.

[00:19:52] Another advantage is that when a wholly owned businesses sold, both parties in that transaction tend to have a pretty good sense of what the asset is. And they come to a rational price during the sale, and oftentimes the seller will only want to sell at a time that is to their benefit. I would also argue that many times the seller of a wholly owned business knows more about that business than the buyer does, so they’re able to make a sale that is more beneficial to them.

[00:20:22] Instead of stocks being a conversation between the buyer and the seller, it’s more like an auction system of buyers and sellers constantly placing orders. And occasionally you’ll find a wide divergence between the value of the business and the price that’s quoted by the market. Other advantages include the ability to get started with a very small amount of.

[00:20:43] Having the opportunity to buy into over 100,000 businesses that are all over the world, as well as very little transaction costs. Mohnish is a big believer that having an ownership stake in a few businesses is the best path to building wealth. And since there is no heavy lifting required in the opportunity to buy bargains among other benefits, it makes buying stakes in publicly traded existing businesses a no-brainer for the Dhandho investor.

[00:21:12] Mohnish then goes on to explain that he wants to own a simple business and to keep the intrinsic value calculation simple as well. He did an intrinsic value analysis in his book on Bed Bath and Beyond, based on the numbers back in 2005, and he came to the conclusion that the company was trading around its intrinsic value and offered a potential return of roughly 10% after projecting out modest conservative growth and discovering that the stock wasn’t trading well below its intrinsic value.

[00:21:42] The stock was an easy pass for him because it didn’t offer much upside as well as a decent chance of delivering returns that were less than 10% per year. Simplicity is key when buying stocks. As he mentions that even Warren Buffett’s style of investing is simple. The key to fighting the psychological warfare he calls it, which I’ll be discussing later, is to buy a simple business with a simple thesis for why you’re likely to make a great amount of money and unlikely to lose very much.

[00:22:12] If it takes more than a short paragraph, then there’s a fundamental problem, and if it requires a complex model, then that’s probably a red flag. Chapter eight in this book covers investing in distressed businesses in distressed industries. He outlines his opinion on the efficiency of markets, noting that he believes that markets are largely efficient for most businesses, and the reason they aren’t fully efficient is because humans are in control of the auction driven pricing mechanism.

[00:22:41] When humans as a group are extremely fearful, the pricing of the assets they are fearful of are likely to fall below their intrinsic value. And then on the opposite end of the spectrum, extreme greed can lead to very optimistic prices in the stock market. When someone is extremely fearful about a company, they can log onto their brokerage and sell their position in just a matter of minutes.

[00:23:05] Mohnish then lists a number of ways you can find distressed businesses. The first of which is to simply look at the news headlines as they tend to cover the negative news about a certain business or certain industry. Meta is a great example of this as it’s a company many people are talking about nowadays.

[00:23:22] Second is Value Line, which is a research service, which also includes a weekly summary of the stocks that have lost the most value in the last 13. I’m sure there are other sources as well. With the internet nowadays showing stocks that are at either quarterly or 52 week lows or stocks with the lowest PE ratios, widest discount to book value, highest dividend yield, and so on.

[00:23:45] Third is he also recommends checking out what other super investors are purchasing, which is what you can find on Data Rama Online on the activity tab where it shows the recent buys and sell made by top investors. These investors won’t necessarily be focused on the most distressed businesses, but they will be looking for, you know, good value investments.

[00:24:06] Be sure to stick around until the end of the episode because I will be touching on Monet’s Holdings and his portfolio, which for the most part only consists of two companies that are in the US and the remainder of his portfolio is inter. Lastly, he also recommends in the book to check out Joel Greenblatt’s website called Value Investors Club, which is a membership site to present and receive ideas.

[00:24:29] Then Mohnish also recommends Greenblatt’s book, the Little book that Beats the Market. As we talk about numerous times on the show, you want to invest in businesses with a durable moat or competitive advantage. Capitalism is brutal and people are always out there trying to find a way to earn more money or steal profits from a business that is earning a lot of money.

[00:24:50] Emote is what keeps competitors from stealing your lunch Emote doesn’t make it impossible to steal a share of a company’s profits, but it makes it very difficult. You can try and make a better Google search, but Google is already free to users and building a better Google search may cost you billions of dollars.

[00:25:09] May not even attract current users of Google anyways. Outside of the qualitative aspects of a business, such as the location Starbucks puts in their stores and how addictive their products are, another way to identify a quality mode is to look at the company’s return on invested capital consistently, high returns on capital.

[00:25:29] Our good, a good indicator of a strong. Mohnish gives an example that if it costs 700 grand to open a Chipotle and the average store generates 250 grand in free cash flow, then that’s a really, really good business. This reminds me of how Dollar General, who is still building out stores will only build a store if they can hit a return on investment of 20% or more for a location.

[00:25:54] It’s also important to understand that history tells us that eventually even the greatest businesses eventually enter the phase of decline. Charlie Munger points out that out of the 50 largest companies on the New York Stock Exchange in 1911, only one remains today, and that’s General Electric. Over the very long term, the odds of any business surviving the forces of competitive destruction are very, very small.

[00:26:21] Because even the most durable moats don’t last forever, it’s probably best to limit your discounted cash flow calculations to 10 years or less. To avoid being too optimistic about the future when you do find a company you’re ready to wager on. Mohnish describes how the Dhandho investor bets big Mohnish, of course, prefers to have a highly concentrated portfolio with a handful of bets.

[00:26:46] He mentioned a Charlie Munger quote with regards to. The wise ones bet heavily when the world offers them that opportunity. They bet big when they have the odds and the rest of the time they don’t. It’s just that simple. Here’s a clip of Mohnish talking about position sizing during his conversation with Stig on episode TIP 442.

[00:27:09] Mohnish Pabrai: If anyone were to invest today with me in my funds, even though we limit ourselves to 10% bets, the top three positions for, I think all my funds are 50 to 60% of assets because they’ve run up. Right? So we bought Micron a few years back and it’s doubled and so on. If you had invested in me when I was starting out, then yeah, we would not have the same degree of concentration because things haven’t run up.

[00:27:34] But typically when investors have joined me, they’ve always come into a fund that probably the top three positions are 40 to 60% type concentration. And then by the time you get to the sixth or seventh position, you’re looking at 90% of assets or something like that.

[00:27:52] I don’t think I need to start a fund and say, I’m going to only have three picks. I could do that, but I think that the nature of investing is such that it would get there anyway. And one of the things to keep in mind is there is this very high error rate, right? We’ve talked about 40, 50% error rates. And so if you have 40, 50% error rate and you have three picks, You could be wrong in two out of three of them, right?

[00:28:20] And if you’re wrong has a range of outcomes, right? Wrong means something could flatline. This doesn’t go anywhere or something is a 20% loss or wrong, could also be permanent. Wipe out zero on that. Uh, it is. All of those are mistakes. Three bets could work as long as you don’t have the wipeouts, right? I think you could have two of the three bets go sideways or be very modest winners and one could carry you.

[00:28:50] That’s possible, but I don’t think you need to be that way, but I would, I would say this, you know, sometimes we do get a chance to make investments where the odds are just so heavily stacked in your favor, and the economics are so compelling, that you would want to try to do more.

[00:29:09] Clay Finck: It takes an incredible amount of conviction to invest so concentrated as he does, but he acknowledges that he’s going to have some sort of error rate of say, 40 to 50%, which is why us as individual retail investors should be careful not to bet too much on one stock.

[00:29:27] Now, this is one of my favorite chapters of the book as Mohnish describes .  calculates the optimal fraction of your money that should be invested into a favorable bet. The more favorable the odds, the more one should bet. If you’re interested in learning the exact formula for this, you can Google it and figure out exactly in general terms.

[00:29:50]  is your edge divided by your odds. To use an example, if there was a coin flip where it was, if it landed heads, you win $2, and if it was tails, you lose $1.  suggests that you should bet 25% of your money each time you’re given that opportunity. Mohnish then tells us a story of Ed Thorpe, who wrote the book Beat the Dealer, where Thorpe described how he was able to gain an edge in blackjack, and he used a Kelly formula to determine his bet sizes when he had an edge over the house.

[00:30:24] In the 1960s, there were tables with single deck blackjack and Thorpe just made a killing off. They didn’t know exactly how he was doing it, but he eventually got kicked out for consistently winning in these casinos. After Thorpe wrote his book on how to win at blackjack, the casinos of course read it and then they wisened up by changing the game and adding more decks.

[00:30:47] Thorpe knew that the best betting environment would be one where there were no table limits. The odds were vastly. And the house was civil about taking losses as well as the mob wasn’t running the casino and they weren’t going to hurt him. And Thorpe found exactly what he was looking for, and it was the New York Stock Exchange and the options markets.

[00:31:08] He would master the options market simply by buying underpriced options in selling the overpriced ones and making up to 6 million per year while taking what he considered to be minimal risk. One Buffett example of capitalizing on opportunities when the odds are overwhelmingly in your favor was when Buffett invested 40% of his partnership’s assets into American Express in November of 1963.

[00:31:36] At the time, American Express had a massive loss from a scandal, and the stock was instantly cut in. Buffett figured out that as long as customers stuck around with American Express, then the company was significantly undervalued, and from his perspective, there was practically no chance that the business was going anywhere.

[00:31:55] So in his eyes, there was practically no downside. Buffett rarely applied this level of concentration because these types of opportunities were so rare for him. So we can see that Buffett in his own way, applied  of betting more when the odds were more heavily tilted in his favor. This stock earned him a three x return over the next three years.

[00:32:17] That followed when he placed that. Pabrai rounds out this chapter by stating, investing is just like gambling. It’s all about the odds, looking for mispriced betting opportunities. Embedding heavily when the odds are overwhelmingly in your favor is the ticket to wealth. It’s all about letting  dictate the upper bounds of these large bets.

[00:32:39] Further, because of multiple favorable betting opportunities available in equity markets, the volatility surrounding  can be naturally tamed while still running a very concentrated portfolio. In chapter 12, Mohnish covered the concept of always having a margin of safety in your investments.

[00:32:57] Warren Buffett is asked about book recommendations. He often talks about what is considered to be the Bible of value investing, which is the intelligent investor. The three biggest ideas Buffett picked up from this book was first the Mr. Market analogy of making the stock market serve you, rather than you being a servant to the market.

[00:33:17] Mr. Market offers you a price every day that you can either take or leave, and there’s no called strikes in this game. Second is that a stock is a piece of a business, and to never forget that you are buying a business which has underlying value based on how much cash goes in and goes out of the business.

[00:33:35] Third is the concept of the margin of safety, which is to make sure that you are buying a business for way less than you think it’s conservatively worth. When you focus on buying an asset for substantially less than it’s worth, we reduce our downside risk in the bigger, the discount to intrinsic value, the lower the risk, and the higher the returns.

[00:33:56] Most of the time companies trade near or above their fair value and value. Investors like Mohnish are waiting for times of extreme distress and extreme pessimism as this is when rationality goes out the window and prices of certain assets go well below their intrinsic value. The March, 2020 liquidity crisis is a perfect example of this.

[00:34:17] As many market participants were forced to sell their stocks to get dollars for whatever obligations they had, or maybe sometimes it was even because of fear, and many of these people were getting margin called and being forced to sell, which further exacerbates the selling, making the discounts to intrinsic value even greater.

[00:34:37] In chapter 15, Mohnish covered the art of selling a stock. Up to this point, he mostly covered how to find a great investment before you decide to purchase the stock. Using the method he’s describing, he lists seven criteria we should meet before purchasing. First, you need to understand the business well and for the business to be in your circle of competence.

[00:34:58] Second, you need to know the intrinsic value of the business and understand how likely it is for the value of the business to change in the next few. Third, the business needs to be priced at a 50% discount to intrinsic value. Fourth, you need to consider if you’d be willing to put a large percentage of your net worth into the business.

[00:35:18] Fifth, the downside needs to be minimal. Sixth, the business needs to have a moat. And seven, the business needs to be run by able and honest manager. The difficulty with deciding to sell a company or not lies in the inability to predict the future. Sometimes we buy a stock and forces outside of our control lead our forecast to differ from what actually occurs in the business.

[00:35:43] A rule that Mohnish sets for himself is that you should only sell a stock within the first two or three years of owning it if you have a high level of certainty that the current intrinsic value is less than the market. To use an example, say you buy a stock for $100 thinking that it’s worth 200, and then the stock declines and it goes down from $100 down to 75.

[00:36:07] Maybe the thesis doesn’t play out as you’d expect the earnings drop for whatever reason, and you’re certain that you misjudged the business when making your original purchase. Maybe now instead of your intrinsic value being $200, you determine it’s actually around $50. Then you may want to consider selling because the company is trading at a price higher than your intrinsic value calculation, even though you’d be selling at a loss at that time.

[00:36:33] So it’s all about understanding the business and having that high level of certainty about the company’s intrinsic value when making the decision to both buy and. In the book, he also talks about what he calls a three year rule. He wants to give a company three years to potentially converge towards its intrinsic value.

[00:36:53] In the first year, the stock in the business might turn against you, but you may still be right, that the company is overvalued. And giving yourself that three years to invest in a business is a lot of times enough to allow the market to realize the true value of that. If it doesn’t converge and the stock hasn’t moved very much during that time, then you may decide that you were wrong on your thesis and you’re going to sell out and allocate to a better idea because there’s always that opportunity cost.

[00:37:21] You can only put a certain dollar in one place at a time without leverage, so you want to allocate your capital wisely and maybe reconsider the businesses that aren’t performing as well as you anticipated. In reading through Monet’s work and learning more about his approach in general, it’s pretty clear that this guy takes more of the buy something cheap rather than buy something quality approach.

[00:37:45] Like I’ve talked about in recent episodes. Buffett a lot of times is looking for a quality business that will be able to grow their earnings for a really long time. While Mohnish is the type of investor who will buy something that is obviously really cheap to him. This is how Buffett invested in his early days, and likely trading out of that position in a few years when the price reaches its intrinsic value.

[00:38:08] Another thing I’ve learned from Mohnish is that you should find a few metrics that allow you to say no to a company really quickly. In order to find the types of picks that Mohnish is finding, you need to be able to sift through a lot of different companies. If a company has a PE of 50, then that is probably a really good sign.

[00:38:27] It’s not even worth looking at for mon. Whereas if a company has a PE of three and is training well below its liquidation value, then that is something that would, you know, get ’em interested and want to dig deeper. Again, you have to select metrics that work for your own approach, but I find it valuable to have an idea of the first things you want to look at when you’re screening for companies.

[00:38:50] Next, I wanted to transition to talk a little bit about Monet’s portfolio today. As of his most recent 13 F, his fund, PK Investments owns two stocks with a sizable position in the us. His 13 F excludes any of his international holdings, and he only holds two sizable positions in the us. The first is Micron, which is 92% of his US holdings and his 13 F.

[00:39:17] And then there’s Brookfield Corporations, which consist of most of that remain. In an interview in the first half of 2022, Mohnish stated that Micron was his largest stock. Holding Micron is very popular amongst the prominent value investors as Mohnish Li Lou, guy Spear. Seth Klarman, among others all have a position in it.

[00:39:40] Mohnish, in his interview with William Green said that he collaborated with Lilu on Micron and Li Luu believes that it will perform very well as an investment. Most of these investors purchased this company around the 30 to $40 per share range prior to 2021. But interestingly, the stock has pulled back like much of the market recently.

[00:40:02] Here at the end of 2022, the stock trades at just under $50 per share after dropping from its 52 week high of $98. Micron is a semiconductor company and a memory chip designer and manufacturer based in the us. They produced two of the main memory chip technologies, which includes what is called the DRAM and the NAND.

[00:40:24] I’m not sure if I’m saying those correctly, but it’s DRAM and NAND. I’m definitely no expert on the semiconductor chips at the end of 2021. They are the fourth largest semiconductor manufacturer company in the world. Like I talked about in my episode covering Buffett’s purchase of TSMC in episode TIP 508.

[00:40:46] The semiconductor industry is very cyclical, so it’s got these boom bus cycles, and you can clearly see that when you look at Microns price chart on a longer time horizon over the last say, 30 years. Cyclical businesses are difficult businesses to be in because when you’re in the down part of the cycle, you have these manufacturers with excess supply, met with a market that is low demand.

[00:41:10] This leads manufacturers to investing less in building out new manufacturing. Thus, when that increased demand comes back, you see the opposite dynamic where you have excess demand and not enough supply. So like a commodity business, the semiconductor industry can be quite cycl. When you look at Microns revenue relative to their cost of goods sold over time, their cost of goods sold is actually quite stable, but their revenues are very volatile due to the shifts in consumer demand and the average selling price of their products.

[00:41:44] Just looking at their gross margins, you can clearly see that they go through these waves of up and down cycles. In 2010, gross margins are around 32%. These drop to 11% in 2012. Back up to the mid 30% range in 2014 and went way up in 2018 and now appears to be more on the downtrend as gross margins sit around 41% in their most recent quarter.

[00:42:11] And these figures are all based on the trailing 12 month numbers. Another difficulty with the semiconductor industry is the high capital expenditures that are required in this business. As the manufacturers need to continually invest and innovate to produce better and better products, it is very capital intensive to build out the property, the plant, the equipment needed to manufacture these chips.

[00:42:37] Myron alone spent 11 billion on capital expenditures in fiscal year 2020. While the company generated 30 billion in revenues that same year, so quite a bit of investment relative to the money they’re bringing. Now the bold case for Micron is that over a long enough period of time, the demand for these chips are going to be higher, say five plus years from now.

[00:43:00] Yes, we may see lower demand from year to year, say in 2023, but looking out at least five years, it’s pretty likely that the demand for these chips is going to be much higher, which hopefully in turn will lead to much higher profits for a company like Micron. That’s the bull case. Another item that these prominent investors have mentioned with regards to Micron is that this specific memory chip industry, because of the ruthless nature of the players in the industry, it’s turned into what’s called an oligopoly with three main players.

[00:43:33] They’re Samsung, Hynek, and Micron. Because you have this oligopoly dynamic, it’s expected that the companies in this industry won’t try and undercut each other as companies have done in the. Thus, we may see a much less cyclical business in the future because with a market that’s an oligopoly, it’s in each company’s best interest to not undercut each other.

[00:43:58] You can think about the soda market with Coca-Cola and Pepsi dominating. They naturally charge higher prices and they don’t try and undercut each other because if they did, neither of them would end up making a decent profit. Another thing to consider with Micron is that the physical limitations of Moore’s law are beginning to become reached, meaning that the primary driver of innovation within the semiconductor industry is coming to a halt, and the capacity of these chips won’t be doubling every two years as they have for decades.

[00:44:31] This lower speed of innovation may lead to their inventory lasting longer, which will then stabilize average selling prices, and then eventually lead to lower capital expenditures that will be needed to continue to innovate on these chips. Again, as I mentioned in the episode covering Taiwan Semiconductor, this technology is critical to the technological age and where the world is moving.

[00:44:56] Mohnish mentioned in an interview that if Amazon were going to spend say, 100 or 200 million on a data center, about 30% of that investment in the data center is going to be going to the memory chip industry, which is just massive. I do like this. Pick from the perspective that you don’t have to bet on a specific AI company or a specific electric vehicle manufacturer.

[00:45:21] I think that owning Micron allows you to be long human innovation and be long, continued development of various technologies and benefit really wherever the world moves towards. Additionally, I do like to see that the company does earn good returns on capital. It’s typically been in the mid-teens, but of course can vary quite a bit from year to year as their profitability rises and falls because of the cyclicality.

[00:45:46] When times are good, the stock can look really cheap because the earnings are quite high relative to the price of the stock. But the market knows that it’s a cyclical business and you can’t rely on those high earnings year after year, and the market essentially expects these earnings to eventually. I think the other stock in his 13 F filing is also worth mentioning, which is Brookfield Corporation ticker bn Q3 of 2022 was the first time he purchased this company, and this is quite an interesting one because it’s a special situation type play.

[00:46:20] Brookfield Asset Management previously operated under the ticker b a m, and what makes this somewhat confusing is that the legacy business is transitioning to be under a new ticker of bn. Brookfield Asset Management is a Canadian asset manager with over 700 billion in assets under management, investing in various things such as gas pipelines, toll roads, data centers, solar farms, hydroelectric dams, and skyscrapers across five continents.

[00:46:52] This is a massive company that makes money three different ways, the first of which is investing their own capital in various project. Then they have their asset management business in which they invest other people’s money in exchange for a management fee. Then the third business is their stakes in publicly held companies that they founded and hold controlling stakes in.

[00:47:14] Brookfield has been a strong outperformer over the years. They’ve had the tailwind of more and more capital wanting to invest in alternative assets, which they really specialize. Over the past 20 years, the stocks analyze return has been 19% per year versus 10% for the S&P 500. Now, what the company announced they’re doing is they’re spinning off 25% of their asset management business into Brookfield Corporation because they believe that the asset management business deserves a higher multiple.

[00:47:46] Brookfield still owns the remaining 75% under the original. The spinoff will be going under the ticker b a m, and the legacy business is transitioning to bn. So Mohnish took a position in the legacy business, bn. Now it looks to me that Brookfield has a lot of tailwinds at its back. This has been a company whose assets under management over the past 20 years or so has just absolutely exploded, and the company foresees that growth to continue for the foreseeable future as they project their distributable earnings to grow by over 20% over the next five years, from 3.7 billion to 9.3 billion, which is really quite incredible.

[00:48:30] The reason they expect continued growth is because they’re filling in the gap and filling that demand for alternative asset investing in new investments in infrastructure. They have a really strong competitive advantage because they invest globally, meaning that they can send these investments to whichever country they believe will get the highest rate of return.

[00:48:49] I was digging into the company’s 2021 annual report, and it’s just insane how big this company. And I suspect a lot of the TIP listeners haven’t even heard of this company or researched them. According to their annual report, they have roughly 180,000 employees globally, and since 2017, their distributable earnings have grown by 29% per year.

[00:49:14] While their assets under management have grown at 25% per. I would think that low interest rates would be a big tailwind for them as investors are searching for yield, so it’ll be interesting to see how their assets under management continue to grow. Now that we have higher levels of interest rates now in 2022 going into 2023, I’d expect Brookfield to be a great company to own in terms of a longer term compounder, as we see continued investments and growth in the asset management.

[00:49:46] Management expects they’ll be able to grow in the high teens over at least the next five years. The stock recently is selling off because I think there’s a lot of confusion around the company and what this spinoff really means for investors. When I look at Micron and I look at Brookfield, and I compare it to the Dhandho checklist, I can see that Monique still applies the principles he laid out in his book years ago.

[00:50:11] And I see companies with wide moats, a potentially large margin of safety. In the case of Micron, he’s betting over 91 million, so he is really betting heavily when he believes the odds are in his favor. Also, looking back to Mohnish’s buys and sell of different stocks over the years, he added Alibaba in the first half of 2021, and ended up completely exiting that position in the second half of 2021 as the stock trended down for pretty much the whole.

[00:50:40] So that’s another interesting move as we’ve seen many investors bet on shares in Alibaba. All right, so that wraps up today’s episode. If you don’t already, be sure to click follow on the podcast app you’re on so you can get notified of all of our future episodes coming out. And if you’re interested in learning more about Mohnish Pabrai, I can’t recommend his book, the Dhandho Investor.

[00:51:01] Enough. With that, thank you so much for tuning into today’s episode, and I hope to see you again next.

[00:51:09] Outro: Thank you for listening to TIP. Make sure to subscribe to Millennial Investing by the Investor’s Podcast Network and learn how to achieve financial independence. To access our show notes, transcripts or courses, go to theinvestorspodcast.com.

[00:51:25] This show is for entertainment purposes only. Before making any decision, consult a professional. This show is copyrighted by the Investor’s Podcast Network. Written permission must be granted before syndication or rebroadcasting.

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