Showing posts with label Sankaran Naren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sankaran Naren. Show all posts

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Coffee Can Investing | ICICI Prudential Mutual's S Naren


Last Updated : | Source: Moneycontrol.com
Coffee Can Investing | S Naren's biggest contrarian call: Betting his house on a real estate crash
In the inaugural episode of Coffee Can Investing series, Saurabh Mukherjea talks to Sankaran Naren, Chief Investment Officer of ICICI Prudential Mutual.
Saurabh Mukherjea

In the inaugural episode of Coffee Can Investing series, Sankaran Naren, Chief Investment Officer of ICICI Prudential Mutual takes Saurabh Mukherjea through his journey in the world of financial markets, his investment style, hits and misses, and the investors he looks up to.

Mukherjea is author of the bestsellers Gurus of Chaos, and The Unusual Billionaires, and is an independent market expert.

The idea of the Coffee Can portfolio traces its roots back to the American Old West, when people would put all their valuables in a coffee can and then forget about them for a long time.

Naren tells Mukherjea that one of his big contrarian calls he got right was outside of the stock market. And that making money in the stock market was relatively easier in the late 80s and 90s when information on companies was scarce.

Hi there, welcome to Coffee Can Investing. My name is Saurabh Mukherjea and it’s my privilege today to be able to interview one of the leading fund managers of our generation, the CIO of ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, Sankaran Naren.

Q: So when someone sees a fund manager from Chennai, the immediate curiosity is that typically, the superstars of Chennai go to IIT and then pursue a career in engineering either in India or abroad. From that world, how did you get pulled into the world of stocks and stock market?

A: Stock market is something which was always very dear to me. Actually, my mother passed away when I was 14. And it was a two-person household because I did not have any brothers and sisters. So, somehow, cricket and stock market were the two conversation points between me and my father in those days and my father would make some small investments in stock markets. Actually the whole process was pretty fascinating and that got me very interested. We are talking about 80s here. At that point of time, very few people invested in equities. So, making money in equities was actually much easier, particularly in public issues in those days and that’s how I got started.

Q: So, this is well before you went to IIT. In your school days you were actually an active investor in the market alongside your father.

A: I would say I was more an advisor to him when I was in 11th or 12th. When I cleared the IIT entrance, my father told me, “You have to join IIT” and he didn’t give me any choice. And it’s very interesting, JEE in those days was a test of mathematics and not the test of engineering at all. And I got in and my father said, “This ensures your middle-class status. So, go in and join.” and it was not something which I wanted to do. But I ended up getting (an admission in IIT) which was then very good. So, I said OK, let’s join.

Q: So I presume that from IIT, you were very clear. After you finished IIT, you wanted a career in finance and that’s how IIM Kolkata came about, right?

A: Absolutely. I was very keen to move out of engineering to finance right from those days and that process and getting MBA from IIM Calcutta was actually best way to get myself into what I always wanted to do, which was finance and stock markets.

Q: So, if my memory serves me right, around 1989, 90, 91…in those days, working for SBI or SBI Caps (SBI Capital Markets) was seen as sort of the big finance job in our country. Is that the path you also wanted to take?

A: Yeah, I actually wanted to go back to Chennai and SBI Caps was a Bombay-head quartered entity. So, I actually picked what was my dream job; ICICI in 1989. I got project finance, which to me was the closest to equity research in retrospect. What people don’t realize in 1989, there was nothing called equity research. There was nothing called FII (foreign institutional investors). There was nothing called research report. There was nothing called CNBC. So, it’s a very different world. So, in that world for me, project finance was the closest to equity research.

Q: One of the most fascinating aspects your career, especially in mid 90s is this Chennai club that you have mentioned in several of your interviews. And recently I took the pleasure to meet Mr. Chaddha who ran the club in the 90s. Could you just take us through what role the club played in the evolution of you as an investor?

A: It was very important because we had made a number of big investing mistakes in 94, 95. When the bear market arrived in 98, all our investing mistakes showed up clearly. What was interesting was you realize that you were not the only person making the mistakes and that there were many others who had made similar mistakes.

So, what I guess Mr. Kamal Chaddha did was he got together a set of people like alcoholics anonymous. These were all people who made mistakes in investing. And it was anonymous at that point of time and got us to discuss our sorrows of losing money. What interestingly came out of that is the realisation that in investing, you sometimes go wrong, sometimes get it right.

When you go wrong, you need the equivalent of support system. A formal organization provides such a support system by the virtue of the number of people in the team, but when you are investing on your own, you don’t get that. So, a group really works. So, it’s like some kind of a psychiatric help which is required to... or a coaching, you can call it either which will help you to make very good investments decisions over a period of time.

Q: So, after that, you didn’t get caught out by the dotcom bubble or the 2008 bubble?

A: No. See, in each bubble, what happens is because of the mistakes of 94, 95 you are trained to be cautious ahead. So, instead of losing money after the bubble, you tend to miss opportunities. So, in 99, you asked yourself, why did you miss Himachal Global, DSQ, Pentamedia, and said that’s part of it and you have to agree that you can’t make all the money.

But in 2001, you were just laughing all the way because you had not made any mistakes. So, what I learned out of it is, you will be earning, you will then find that you have lost some money-making opportunities but after the cycle ends, you find that you are actually a big winner.

Q: One of the striking things about your career is you both before you joined the fund managing profession and since you joined, you were very willing to take contrarian calls, and you were willing to talk about it publicly.  Once you have made visible, high-profile contrarian calls, doesn’t that exert a fair degree of pressure on you? What role does the rest of your support system say, people at home, how do they help you deal with that pressure which arises running this sort of amount of money and with taking contrarian calls?

A: See, it’s very interesting that my family doesn’t know much about stock markets. And my son is a special child who doesn’t understand what is fund management or anything to do with money. So, I think when I go home and talk to them, I don’t realize anything on the stock market. So, that’s a very different kind of an environment. Actually, in this whole contrarian style what I have seen is when you do it the first time, you go through intense pressure.

When you do it the second time, you go through even the same kind, but as you keep doing it and as you have successes, you will find that it’s part of your daily routine. Of course, taking pain is not easy but that has to be part of a contrarian style.

And you get used to it. So, that’s how I have actually learnt it and there are people also now who do follow contrarian style and they are also in the same pain. So, you again take pleasure from participating in the pain with some other people whom you may know or you may not know.

Q: I guess I can see why you keep visiting Chennai to meet the club again and again. On the question of pain and contrarian style, one of the intriguing developments in the last 6, 7 years has been that apparently everybody in India or at least majority of the investors I meet now are value investors, right? They are all equities of Warren Buffett if I believe what they are saying and value investing seems to be proliferating in the country and yet we have a stock market trading act at 23 times forward earnings. When you meet other investors, when you assess fund managers who you are trying to interview, how do you gauge whether someone’s really a value investor or whether it’s someone who has read too many books from the American school of investing?

A: I think one is when you meet people in the midst of a bull market, you can’t judge who a value investor is, who is not. I mean Warren Buffet says that it’s only when the tide goes out that you knowing who swimming naked. So, I think from that point of view, today is not the time to judge value investing. But I have seen for example, there was a big real estate bull market, how many people had the ability to say that this bull market is very very extended and real estate won’t do well for many years? Very few. So, what I believe is that the time to judge value investing is not in the middle of a bull market, it’s to judge when you are in the midst of a bear market.

That’s why I would say that the process that we have followed is by trying to train people into fund management and not recruiting experienced fund managers because the moment you recruit experienced fund managers, they always come with the view, “I know how to create alpha”, whereas our model has always been we are trying to teach people how to create alpha, how to take pain, how to stay out of a bubble, how to make money over a cycle. These are things that we are continuously learning.

Q:  If you look back at your last 15 years of your investment management career, I am sure you will recall instances where you took a deep contrarian position. I am sure you will be able to recall at least one in this episode, where you took a contrarian position and it didn't work out. Could you just talk us through one example of each type, one where it worked out in a contrarian position, in which you made plenty of money, and one where it didn't?

A: Let me take an example what hasn't worked out, so you know there is a big boom in real estate. So, I said let's try to see which is the cheapest way to buy a real estate. So, I looked and found out that the tea plantation per acre was one of the cheapest ways to buy land anywhere in this country.

Q: …this is 2003-2004?

A: No, 2013

Q: Wow.

A: So, I went to Assam and happened to see some of the fantastic tea plantation companies, I came to know that land is found for a lakh or two per acre. So, I said let me now buy a tea plantation company. It is after all the cheapest way to buy tea, I don't think you can manage to get a land in Assam so cheap. So we went to buy tea plantation stock and I have been waiting for returns from it for 5 years. My colleague said how many more years will you wait, I said it is still the cheapest way to buy land in India, I don't think land in India has become cheaper, but there is no sign of returns. What worries me after looking at it is maybe it is the fate of lots of farmers in India. Because if I am not able to make money out of a tea plantation stock, that’s the state of the farmers of India as well. So, that was interesting case of a failure.

Q: Why do you think the market hasn't seen the logic? Tea plantation is giving you so much land and the land is not reflected in the share price and hence the share price should get rerated. Any reasons why the market is not seeing the logic?

A: Somehow the tea plantations are not growing 20 percent a year; tea demand grows by 1-2 percent.

So, while we all think that there is a high food inflation, the reality from what I can see from my tea investment is tea prices are not going up so significantly because the population growth is just one and a half percent and then tea is a mature product. So why should tea demand grow much higher than population growth?

Q: On the converse side, you took a contrarian position and it worked out like a dream.

A: I think the most contrarian position I took was actually outside equities; in real estate. I used to see everyone buying real estate between 2007 and 2013, and you know I had seen in 2007 most of the infra stocks was pricing in 2014 earnings.

So, when you approached 2012-13, I saw a number of people buying projects under construction real estate, what could come 4- 5 years later or 7 years later, from builders whose antecedents were not clear.

I could see there was a reasonably large bubble in real estate and I said I don't need to stay in my own house so I ended up selling my flat in Chennai and Bombay, and I have been very impressed that in 5 years that the real estate prices have gone nowhere, and people ask me how did you come to the conclusion. I said I used a simple equity technique for valuation.

No one understands the valuation of real estate. So I looked at rental yields and at mortgage interest rates. In the US, at the same time when Indian property prices were high, rental yield was much higher than the mortgage interest rate. Whereas in India there was a 7 percent gap. That means the mortgage interest rate was nine and a half percent, rental yield was 2 percent. I said the seven and a half percent gap can't continue.

So, that was a fairly good contrarian call because it was a scale call. Because the number of people who made mistakes in India in real estate, in that period is not small

Q: Yeah, it is very interesting, if someone had, anyone had in a way, sold their Mumbai or indeed Delhi residential real estate in 2013 after the 10 year boom and bought the stock market in September 2013 when Raghuram Rajan became RBI Governor, that would have been the ideal asset allocation strategy to follow. Given that you know, at one level it is as easy as you just explained do value investing; you have a look at what is the ragingly popular asset class that everybody and their father, mother are buying, and you do your homework as you become a little sceptical of the asset class and you try to find less popular asset class, given the simplicity of it, why is this sort of value investing so hard to do, what stops people from becoming investors like?

A: The problem with the best investing decisions is that the near term is very painful. When Warren Buffett invested in Goldman preference shares or GE preference shares in 2008 the near term was very painful. The long term was very good for him but the fear of the near term is a big problem. So, recently my company did something in December, January of returning money in small cap PMS (portfolio management schemes).

And this was the decision my CEO and head of PMS took. They came and asked me, “Can we do it?”  I said,” It's a perfect example of a contrarian in decisions, so I will support you.”

At the end of the day, small caps have gone up from 2013 to 2018 by 200 percent. If you had asked anyone 3 to 4 months back whether it was easy to believe small caps had peaked, the answer would be  ‘no’. Because everyone was very clear that small caps are the way to go, so, I would say that the fear of the decision going wrong in the near term, the inability of the people to time the market correctly, makes this decision very very difficult.

 Q: None of us wants to take the pain in the short run and hence we like to go with the momentum strategy and go with the popular decisions. So, if you had to take a step back and say, it turned out to be a good principle which you used to figure out where we are in the stock market cycle or the bond market cycle. How do you figure out using broad thumb rules, where are we in the cycle, is it a question of looking at the RBI rate policy, do you look at my stock market multiple times, how do you figure out where we are in the cycle?

A: Actually I must tell you how flows happen, so, if you look back at the last 20 years, which were the best years to invest in equities, it was when both FIIs and local mutual funds were sellers. The worst years to invest in equities was when both of them were aggressively investing.

Go back in 2002, neither locals nor FIIs were investing, they were selling. It was one of the best years to actually invest, in 2007 both local mutual funds and FIIs were investing aggressively and that was the best year to take out money. So, if you look at it, if you had to use one metric, I would say, look at the scale of local inflows and the scale of foreign inflows. Similarly, look at the scale of foreign outflows and the scale of local outflows from mutual funds, which gives you a perfect indicator and it is a very difficult indicator sitting in a mutual fund to follow. Because what I am trying to tell you is that money will come to you when the market is extremely expensive and money will go when the market is very cheap, that is not an easy thing.

Q: Yeah, absolutely. But in that context, basically the mutual fund manager’s job in India is the opposite of the central bank. In India, the mutual fund manager’s job seems to be to... just as the stock market parties getting really wild…go to people and say put even more money in the stock market. You said you prefer to recruit talent from scratch rather than hiring experienced hands, as it allows you to build an ecosystem in this house of other value-oriented fund managers. If you see that culture, would you say that across equities, you have been able to create a stable of funds, which is able to give an investor steady returns regardless of where we are in the cycle.

A: Clearly, I have been surprised because in 2007, 2008 and2009, I actually went through a heart-wrenching process, where people invested in 2007 lost money in 2008, did not invest in 2008 and missed a big rally in 2009.

So, we end of the day based on that experience we created two things,  one was we created a category called balanced advantage,  whose job was to sell as the markets go up and buy as the markets go down. And I didn't expect it to be successful but the company made it successful, which was something, which was unbelievable.  The second is, in August, September 2013 we went out and told people to invest in close-ended funds and at that point of time people said close-ended funds can't deliver a good investing experience. So, we have been continuing to raise money in closed-end funds but today when we raise money in closed-end funds, we actually put a good part of the money that we have collected in cash or hybrid portfolios because at end of the day markets are not cheap.

So, we came up with two models what I called the closed end model and the balanced advantage category and we have been trying to do the same thing in debt. Truth is that that the market is not yet as developed as it is in equity. So, we are trying the same kind of construct as balanced advantage fund in debt as well and we are trying that. In my broad view, it is impossible to change behavioural finance, it is impossible for you to collect money at the bottom. It is impossible for you to take out money at the top. So, it is very imperative that the mutual fund has to that job because behavioural finance tells you that everyone can't do it. So if you can do it, the investor can't do it. So, if you do it you can give a very good investor experience over the long-term.

Q: Leaving aside the Chennai club, any other Gurus any other bosses, colleagues from you have learnt a lot from in the Indian context?

A: In the Indian context, we all watch everyone, many of them are your peers, your competitors. It was the 1999 to 2004 cycle, where I got to see what Birla Mutual Fund was. What Alliance Mutual Fund was. These were all big mutual funds in that phase and we watched what they did right, what they did wrong, obviously, you know, the gurus like Nemish Shah and Mr Jhunjhunwala, this is where all people again you could track their portfolios.

Once they became famous you could track their portfolios that give you additional insights, so,  these were  clear leads and I think the advent of the date and the advent of the data being available, so many companies and their shareholding patterns gives you such valuable insights over a period of time but I tell my colleagues, in the 1990s, we had nothing and that's why it was easier to make money whereas today you know what every big investor has done, every quarter because his shareholding is very visible to you.

Q: So, if you suggest taking that construct for the thing Michael Mauboussin came up with, this simple formula that the amount of alpha a fund manager would generate is the fund manager’s ability multiplied by the efficiency or lack thereof, in that part of the market. So say in small caps, if the fund manager is reasonably able, there is enough inefficiency in the Indian market to generate lots of alpha. By that same token in BSE 100 the efficiency is less, and even if the fund manager is skilful, the alpha is presumably modest. Is that a framework that you have used because as a CIO you have to figure out where to allocate scarce resources to generate outperformance. How do you make that resource allocation decision?

A: It is very complicated, the problem is part of what we are measured by is measured on a 1-year basis, sometimes to take the right investment decisions you will have to actually invest with a much longer-term view, and if you are keen on trying to deliver alpha in the short run, you can't make the best decisions. I was lucky with my bets on metals in 2015 and telecom in 2016 as returns came quickly, surprisingly. But good investment decisions can take 3 or 5 years to show results.  Increasingly the market is going to be more efficient, making it much more difficult for people like us, which is the reason why I believe that multi-asset construct where you are selling equities as the market goes up and buying equities as the market goes down is a much better way to try to create alpha for the customer because it is in pure equity funds, where actually this problem of Michael Mauboussin calls, efficiency is going to become more and more a problem

Q: Beyond Mauboussin, any other gurus in the world of investing either in India or outside India?

A: Clearly, two more, James Montier and Howard Marks and I would say James Montier has written some of the best research papers as a research analyst and we have all learnt from him, … there is a very famous research report called 10 tenets of investing, which I think is one of his best pieces and Howard Marks has completely demystified investing as something very simple in his website called Oaktree Capital. In the 1990s, barring a few Warren Buffett books, there was nothing available for us to learn on investing. Today there is so much information available freely on the internet. But the practice is still difficult, so it appears very easy because you have access to the resources but to practice good investing techniques is not as easy as reading about them

Thank you Naren, thanks for your time and thank you to our viewers hope you learnt a lot from listening to Naren, we appreciate your time and look forward to seeing you again on the next episode of the series.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Stock investing is not only about buying the right stock - S Naren


Stock investing is not only about buying the right stock
September 14, 2016, 8:12 AM IST

By S NAREN

Knowledge on the process of investing has been shaped over decades, through incisive communication by various thought leaders like Warren Buffett, Peter Lynch, James Montier, etc. On careful observation, it can be noticed that a lot of the investment theory is focussed on only one aspect of investing — buying, leaving behind the other two crucial aspects i.e. sizing (quantum of buying) and selling.

Aspect I: Buying

When it comes to picking stocks, as Peter Lynch puts it -there are five types of stocks — cyclicals, steady companies, companies based on trends, turnaround companies and asset backed companies. In my opinion, a beginner investor should keep away from both, turnaround and asset backed companies, since the quantum of knowledge required to take a call on either of the types of stocks is quite extensive. In comparison, it is relatively easier to spot companies which are cyclical, steady or are trend based.

Cyclicals: Many of the commodity-based sectors see cyclical trends as can be seen in metals, oil, shipping, sugar, commercial vehicles, capital goods etc. The point to remember while investing in these pockets is that there will be times when these companies will do very badly, which should be the ideal time to buy, and there will be times when these companies do very well, which are times to sell.
The key understanding here is the best time to buy a cyclical stock is when their share price is low and not when their earnings are high. For example, when sugar prices are at their bottom, sugar stocks will be at the bottom, but their valuation in terms of price to earnings, will be very costly.

So it is important to buy cyclicals based on share prices rather than earnings.

Steady Companies: In general, steady companies (consumer, pharma) are most suitable for investors who want steady returns. However, in the last few years, these companies have done well and therefore, as a mutual fund investor, we have been careful about such names, not because these companies are not steady, but because their stock prices are high. When the market was at its peak in 2007, these steady companies were low on valuation and presented an exceptional opportunity to invest.

Trend-based Companies: Trends, as Peter Lynch says, is one of the easiest for a lay investor to identify and invest in. It was very apparent in 2005 that people were moving towards mobile phones. As a result, it was apparent that ecommerce would gather pace.
Similarly, one of the big trends that occurred was that scooters were gaining at the expense of motor bikes in many parts of India. So, investing based on trends is easy for any layman who is able to observe these trends. Going forward, with improving penetration of health insurance and changing demographics, I believe healthcare (hospitals) as a trend provides a good long-term investment opportunity today.

Aspect II: Sizing

Once the stock to be added to the portfolio is decided, the next vital step is the quantum of buying or sizing; this is one of the least talked about areas of investing. When the amount to be invested is small, then Warren Buffett says, it is better to run a concentrated portfolio, something which he did in his initial years of investing. At the same time, one has to be aware that this form of portfolio requires doing better homework. The conviction and concentration of an investment should always be based on risk and potential upside seen.

Aspect III: Selling

What I learnt after a decade of being in investment management is — it is better to convert the word ‘selling’ to ‘switching’, because it is difficult to determine when to sell. If you view every selling decision as a switch and evaluate a switch, it is much easier to take a selling decision. This would ensure that one wouldn’t ruminate whether the selling decision happened at the right time or not.
Bubbles and Bursts In 2013,

In 2013, when Warren Buffett visited India, we got an opportunity to meet him as a part of a group. At that time, someone asked him what he learnt from his decades of investing; the answer presented an interesting insight. In his 6-7 decades of investing, he saw 6-7 bubbles and bursts. He alluded to this fact and said that what you do in a bubble and burst is the most important part of investing.

In India, there were stock market bubbles in 1992, 1994, 2000, 2007 and bursts in 1998, 2002, 2008. My experience has taught me that it is very important to be rational in both the situations as these are the opportunities to make sizeable long term money in the equity market. To sum up, investing is a very interesting area. If you enjoy it and make money, you should continue with it. If you enjoy it and lose money, invest into equities via a mutual fund. If you don’t enjoy investing, then too consider investing in a dynamic asset allocation fund today.

(Author is CIO, ICICI Prudential Asset Management)

Friday, October 30, 2015

Wizards of Dalal Street 2015 - Sankaran Naren


In 2009, as markets around the world were breaking down, Sankaran Naren, one of India's top fund managers came across The Checklist Manifesto, a bestselling book by doctor-writer Atul Gawande.

The book deals with the simple yet powerful concept of the utility of creating check-lists -- it has achieved widespread practice in fields from medicine to aviation -- in order to reduce mistakes. Naren then went on to create a similar checklist that encapsulated the key points of his own investing framework.

In an interview with value investor Ramesh Damani for his CNBC-TV18 seriesWizards of Dalal Street, he outlined the three key criteria underpinning his market philosophy: pay close attention to fear, valuations and flows.

The checklist helps Naren, chief investment officer at ICICI Prudential AMC, reinforce his rules when emotion is ruling high in equities and helps him take a contrarian approach to investing.


For instance, earlier this year, metals firm Glencore lost about 90 percent of its value in London, following the commodity rout.

"It was led by smart people, had cash and was certainly not the worst in the world," he said. "That was the lemon moment. But for you to gather the guts to look at metals as a sector. But in the 15 days that followed that day [when Glencore hit a low], some metal stocks in India rallied 40-50 percent."

During times of bull market peaks, he keeps a market capitalization rule that comes in handy. "In early 2008, the mcap of some property stocks was more than the entire pharma industry and of some power stocks more than the FMCG pack," he pointed out.

Below is the verbatim transcript of S Naren’s interview with Ramesh Damani.

Q: Aviation, medicine, stock picking, disparate disciplines, but something ties them together, doesn't it?

A: If you at it in aviation it is completely prevented accidents. In medicine it has reduced the number of mistakes and that the same thing holds good for investment because in investing also if you reduce the number of mistakes you can make a lot of money.

Q: How did you come up with this checklist theory of yours?

A: Actually as part of our work we try to read books and there was a very nice book written by a person called Dr Atul Gawande called The Checklist Manifesto. It was a fascinating book because it was written by a doctor and there was a lot of reference to investing. That got me interested.

Q: Atul writes that, okay, you clean your hands for example, you have better outcomes in surgery or you use Quinine and you can cure Malaria for example. Markets are more nebulous, aren't they?

A: Markets are nebulous in the short run and there is clearly emotions which play a role but there is a history to market. You will see that there have been in crisis, there have been euphorias, there have been bubbles. So, what happens, if you look at the 11 years that I spent in mutual funds we have seen all kinds of market. You get a good grip if you use checklist on where you are in the cycle. For example you know when you are in euphoria, you know when you are in fear, you know that at points of time that you are in bubble.

Q: What is the checklist for putting money in equities? 

A: In equities if you ask me, there are three things which matter; whether there is fear, how is the valuation and third is what is the flows. For example, whenever Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) sell, you have to put money in equities, because fear is rising. In fact they looked at the last 20 years and found that whenever FIIs have sold aggressively, like 1998, 2002, 2008, 2011 and recently in August-September 2015, those fire opportunities to invest. But if you did not have a checklist you would be wondering what would happen tomorrow, because every day you are worried what is happening in China, what is happening in emerging markets, but actually our checklist gives us the confidence to say it is time to put my money today.

Q: If checklist was all there was to your investment process, a database specialist would be a great stock picker but clearly that is not true.

A: That is why even if you make use of checklist, it does not ensure complete elimination of mistakes. It is not like in the airline industry where you can not have any accidents. You do make mistakes because markets behave differently, people in the markets behave differently, so it only reduces the number of mistakes. But once you reduce the number of mistakes, you are on a good wicket in the market over a long period of time.

Q: You met Atul Gawande. What did he explain to you about the checklist process?

A: He actually is a medical doctor and as a medical doctor he was telling us how beautifully using checklist reduce the number of mistakes in the operation theatre and he found there a lot of people like Mohnish Pabrai and others who use this checklist, what he wrote about medicine into investing and then he finally wrote the book.

Q: Give me an example in life where in your career a checklist has actually helped you.

A: Clearly if you ask me, you can see a bubble, for example if you look at a situation of fear, take metals for example in August-September in 2015, at that point of time, the key characteristic is fear. You have a company called Glencore Xstrata, which is listed in London, is down 90 percent and then you go and look at the company, it is led by smart people, has cash, it has not been the worst company in the world, so if you look at that day, you can clearly see that that is what I call almost like a lemon moment in metal. So for that day for you to gather the guts for you to look at metals as a sector and tell the external world that metals looks like a good pick was such a difficult thing and I couldn't believe when the 15 days which followed that day certain metal stocks in India gave 40 percent.

Q: Lots of periods in last 10 years, India is a very volatile market where you had fear and greed in equal measures. August 2013 the new Modi bull market, the Modi's election has the checklist helped you through all these situations?

A: Clearly we started learning about it only after the 2008 crash. So, till August 2013 as a house we were telling people to invest in our US bluechip fund because their checklist told us that till the current account deficit came down the US market would be more interesting to Indian investors because of the situation that dollar could keep appreciating against rupee. However, once the current account deficit came down in August-September 2013 we actually stopped marketing our US fund and we actually got the opportunity to look at investing into domestic closed ended funds and we launched some of them.

Q: How does Naren a Mechanical Engineer become interested in the stock market? 

A: There is a long history to it. My mother passed away when I was 14 and I didn't have any brothers and sisters. My father used to have the habit of investing in public issues in 70s and 80s and that made him pretty interested and therefore he educated me right at the beginning which I am talking about in 80s in Chennai on the merits of equity investing.

Q: Let us move on to contrarianism which is the hallmark of your investing style. First let me ask you a question. Have you used WhatsApp?

A: Yes.

Q: Jan Koum was the guy who designed WhatsApp and he claims that he designed it because he wanted to call his father in the Ukraine and did not have the money to make the call and spawned a USD 20 billion empire as a result of that, that is his story. What is your story about contrarianism? How did you get into that?

A: In 1989, when I passed out of IIM, I started looking at the secondary market and I had an absolutely phenomenal investing experience between 1989 and 1994.

Q: Everyone is a genius in a bull market, we had a great bull market at that time.

A: So I was a genius growth investor who could make huge money, who could think of good ideas which were multi baggers. You know I always believed that by being an Mater of Business Administration (MBA) degree holder who knew how to look at an annual report, I had information arbitrage and I could make money off it. That I would make money so quickly in that boom was not something known to me, but when I made it, obviously you get drunk and then you make mistakes.

Q: What was that mistake?

A: The mistake was I thought that the foreign investors were very smart. There were a number of companies in 1994 like Natural Energy Processing Company Limited (NEPC), Southern Petrochemical Industries Corporation Ltd (SPIC), many of these companies they did Global Depository Receipt (GDR) issues.

Q: A dishonour list, if you will sometimes.

A: I do not want to mention that. I thought that I was buying some of these stocks at one-third the GDR price and I felt I am investing much better than their foreign investor who invested at three times the price, then after that I lost 90 percent and here I was in 1997, not knowing after the Asian financial crisis why I lost so much of money after being so smart? So that led us to a team of friends who had all made the same mistakes.

Q: The team of friends were a group of fellow investors in Chennai, right? That influenced you a lot. Just tell me a little bit about that.

A: Yes, actually that group you know were all people who needed, in those days I would call psychiatric help, because all of us had lost money in the 1994-1997 period. So we all needed support to know what mistake we made and looking for answers. So we got into this group. When we entered this group and then went about the process, we realized that you cannot be a momentum investor in the long run to make money. You need to know when to buy and you need to know when to sell and most of the time when you want to sell, the others should be interested in buying and you should be interested in not buying. So, that is how the whole concept of I would say contrarian thinking came and for which our first experience was in 1999-2000, the tech bubble when we saw stocks like Global Tele, DSQ software, Penton Media.

Q: They went to stratospheric heights, they were the most celebrated stocks.

A: And we had to avoid them and most people around us said, these people have more than 10 years of experience in equities and they are saying these companies are useless, we are making money. But contrarian investing that we have to look at the stock and come to a conclusion, we were negative on many of them. So contrarian investing helped us to stay solvent. First, we were considered irrational in 1999-2000, we did not get it and then we realized that we were solvent when the others became insolvent in 2001-2002.

Q: But it is painful to hold through that kind of a bubble rise. Being a contrarian investor Buffett was one at that time and every day the stocks rise and your stocks fall. So, how do you handle that intellectually?

A: It is very easy when you are managing your own money, but in 2007 I was running funds which many of them underperformed the benchmark in 2007. Out of the same streak of what I call contrarian investment and when you are handling other people's money and you are underperforming benchmark people came to me and said you are running value discovery but why are you not able to beat the benchmark and I said the contrarian investing style and whatever I had learnt in investing over 17 years told me that you have to be careful and I am going the infra names although I was running the infra fund then.

Q: But when you do contrarian investing, it is not just about being different from the crowd, you want to find triggers for a change, right? So, how do you assess the sector that you like?

A: Sometimes the triggers in 2007 frankly we never knew there was a global financial crisis coming in and towards the end of 2007 as the markets kept going up we didn't know what that trigger would be. But our 1999-2000 hat definitely told me that something will happen. When will it happen I don't know but 1999-2000 told me that it will happen and you won't know the reason.

Q: You look for anecdotal reasons that the public starts coming to the market, people talk nonsense, is that some of the checklist of a bear market?

A: Clearly off bull market. In that period I had analysts coming into my room and telling me the stock looks very cheap on 2014 earnings.

Q: In 2008, that triggers a bell.

A: That clearly triggered a bell and market caps in that period there were market caps which were astounding. If you look at some of the companies then like some of the real estate companies were higher than the entire pharma sector.

Q: A power company was bigger than the entire FMCG basket I remember.

A: Correct. So, those market caps don't lie. Earnings can go up cyclically, it can come down cyclically but market caps gave me the best reasons to stay rational but it was tough.


Q: Let us talk about value investing, growth investing, value investing are they two different species?

A: Warren Buffett says it is joined at the hip. It is not like it is zero, one.

Q: Indian naturally favour value investing as a cultural ethos?

A: I have been surprised to know that Indians favour value investing in everything other than investing in stock markets. When it comes to sale of Amazon's or Flipkart's of the world they believe in value investing.

Q: We want a cheap shirt but not a cheap stock?

A: Yes, that is clear.

Q: How do you distinguish between a value stock and a value trap?

A: Intrinsically I think Indians are not value investors. They have to go through a cycle to become value investors. You don't start being a value investor on day one. I have a team of colleagues, many of them young and many of them will question me on many of my value investing stocks. I find that conversation with them has really helped to me avoid many value traps.

Q: Give me an example of a value trap that you avoided? How about the PSU banks which were the favoured sector in the market but you avoided them.

A: In 2008 due to what happened in the global financial crisis money went to public banks all over the world. That was a very interesting period where what you saw that in a sector where both private sector and public sector is there, the public sector gained in the year 2008 across the world.

So, people got into this perception that what as true in other sectors where private sector gains would not happen in banking. Whereas if you looked at the entire process, you knew that was a one time event out of GFC.

Q: Your checklist told you that problem is there in the credit cycle?

A: Yes. That is why from then on it was pretty easy to know that private banks would gain at the expense of public sector banks. Also 2008 proved  that banking was a more unsafe sector from an equity investor point of view and you had to do your rigorous work than any other sector because of the persons whom I used to watch the Legg Mason Value Fund of Bill Miller, his fund got destroyed in 2008.

Q: He just got a whole bunch of wrong stocks.

A: Yes because he had 38 percent weightage in financials. That combination I realised that you have to be very careful in leverage sectors.

Q: That is after 20 years of outperforming the S&P continuously almost, the man went overweight and got a divorce. 

A: Yes.   

Q: You have a reputation in industry of not being afraid to trade your stocks.

A: Sometimes you do it but for example in 2012-13 for almost two years now I have been underweight some of the quality stocks and quality stocks have continued to do well. However what I find is with this whole world of passive investing which has come in the rest of the world there are opportunities which come due to induction of stocks into some index, dropping of stocks from index and those give me very good arbitrage opportunities.

Q: Other than your famous checklist, the famous contrarianism, what else do you look at? You have often said that current account deficit is something you pay a lot of importance to.

A: I do pay a importance to many factors. I believe that if you see capital being allocated well in a country or in a company, you tend to make money. So, you always look at how capital is allocated. If you feel capital is allocated well you tend to make money and that is true of a country also. If you see why India is one of the better equity opportunities is because there as a country we have allocated capital much better than some of the other countries which may have grown faster but have not allocated capital well.

Q: You are referring to China perhaps. Summarise for me what is S Naren's investing philosophy?

A: I would say that look for opportunities in fear, look for opportunities in greed and communicate. ICICI brand has given me the opportunity to communicate to the country and use this opportunity to make equities a good asset class for the entire country, educate people.

I have been in equity markets form 1989 but the average investor has not managed to make the money that the markets have given him.

Q: People fail to understand that index in 1980 was 100, it is closer to 30000 now, 300X move has been made and if your wealth hasn’t multiplied by that amount you have been doing disservice to your portfolios?

A: Absolutely. I think the entire savings market through the mutual fund industry  is a beautiful opportunity for an investor and that is my main hope that we will try to increase assets that we can collect from investors and make money for them in the long run.

Q: I have a checklist of rapid fire round with you. You enjoyed your education the most where - IIT or IIM?

A: IIM.

Q: Would you prefer on a Sunday playing Bridge with your friends in Chennai or listen to Carnatic music?

A: Listen to Carnatic music and playing Bridge together.

Q: Are you an early riser or late sleeper?

A: Early riser.

Q: Tea or Coffee?

A: Coffee.

Q: Your favourite city in India?

A: Chennai. :-)

Q: If you had a choice of dinner with Atul Gawande or James Montier what would you pick?

A: Having met Atul Gawande this time it would me James Montier.

Q: Sensex 50000 by?

A: I can't predict and I don't believe that you can forecast so accurately.

Q: Your favourite ratio when you read a balance sheet?

A: Price to earnings (PE) ratio.

Q: An Indian investor that you admire the most?

A: Nimesh Shah.

Q: An Indian CEO that you have admired the most?    

A: I think right now it is N Chandrasekaran.

Q: A stock pick that you are most proud of?

A: LMW in 1989.

Q: Your dumbest stock pick to date? 

A: It has been textile companies and spending lot of time on many textile companies.

Q: Name the one thing that keeps you up at night?

A: I think the responsibility of managing our public money.

Q: One contrarian theme that you are focusing on right now?

A: Last few months it has been metals and oil and gas.

Damani: What you have said is that what is comfortable is really profitable but in the last 30 minutes you have not only given us comfort but also some profitable ideas how to invest your money.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Value does not mean 'cheap'


Even large-cap stocks which have corrected significantly might hold value. However, there could be several value traps in certain sectors

Ashley Coutinho  June 29, 2015 Last Updated at 00:10 IST

The stock market has been volatile for most of this year, with periods of correction and significant up-moves. Despite being almost flat this year, the market is still up 45 per cent since September 2013. At a one-year trailing price-to-earnings multiple (PE) of 22.2, the Sensex is still trading above its historical average.

For value investors, this could be a tricky period. Should they use the intermittent corrections as buying opportunities? Or stay on the sidelines, owing to high valuations?

Experts believe there are still enough opportunities to 'value pick' in this market. "I would look to identify companies that are in strong businesses and which offer good growth potential over a period of time, available at discounted valuations. For example, one could look at Indian private banks, though selectively," says Venugopal Manghat, co-head of equities, L&T Investment Management.

According to S Naren, chief investment officer, ICICI Prudential MF, investors can scout for value in companies which underperformed from 2007 to 2015. "Since these stocks have offered modest returns over the eight-year period, investors have shunned these for want of attractive returns. We believe a robust bottom-up picking approach for these stocks can offer value opportunities," he says.

Manghat feels investors would be better off adopting a stock-specific approach, instead of looking at sectors to identify value. "Broadly speaking, I would think one is more likely to find value in the cyclical sectors than in defensive consumption sectors at this point. Cyclical bets could offer value as these could be companies at cyclically low earnings, with good potential to grow as the cycle turns," he says.

Large-caps vs mid-caps
There has been a broad-based rally during the past year, in which mid-caps and small-caps ran up substantially. Is there still value left in these?

According to Naren, large-caps appear reasonably valued, including some in the pharmaceutical and consumer space which have corrected significantly. "In the mid-cap and small-cap space, some stocks are trading at 40-50 times the PE. They might correct but at this point, large-caps are relatively attractive. Investors should choose either large-cap funds or balanced funds, with an aim to avoid any downside in the short term," he says.

Nilesh Shah, managing director of Kotak MF, says the chances of finding value in small-caps and mid-caps are theoretically much higher. For, there are at least 5,000 such listed stocks available, which are far less researched than large-caps. Having said that, he feels that there are pockets of value in the latter as well. "Many large companies have cut costs and, at the same time, invested significantly in building capacities, brands, distribution and innovation during the last downturn. These could offer good value-buying opportunities for investors," he says.

Value traps
Buying into unreasonably cheap stocks might, however, also end as a value trap for investors. "Currently, we see value in select metal stocks. However, some of these could be value traps because the value of their debt might ensure these companies do not have sufficient intrinsic value. Also, some of the highly leveraged infrastructure companies seem to be value traps at this point," says Naren. He adds one way to avoid value traps is to avoid unreasonably cheap, low PE or low price to book companies.

Experts say once a value stock has been identified, it is imperative to note the potential catalysts that can help monetise value of the assets into earnings in a reasonable time frame. "A number of stocks might optically look cheap but really have no inherent strengths or factors to re-rate. These could be value traps," says Manghat. "Also, stocks can de-rate to abysmal levels for reasons like corporate governance issues or misallocation of capital, deterioration of balance sheet or return ratios because of the structural decline in the business. These are traps one should avoid."

Strategy 
The best time to go hunting for value picks is during a negative global event. In the past decade, for instance, there were two such major opportunities - the September 2001 ('9/11') attack on the World Trade Center in New York and the Lehman crises. After both, stocks across the world went into a free fall. "When you have big global events, markets become cheaper, which provides investors the biggest opportunity for absolute value," says Naren. The other good time to collect value stocks is when business leaders or businesses with limited competition fall to low valuations, say experts.

According to Shah, it is important to build a portfolio of value investments, rather than having a concentrated holding, so that different catalysts play out at different points in time.

Naren believes investors should be agnostic on market-caps while searching for value picks. "Given the way the markets have got integrated, value can be unlocked in large-caps as well as mid-caps or small-caps. Therefore, flexibility across market capitalisations could be a suitable style in value investing," he says.

Experts believe one must avoid the temptation to exit value stocks too quickly, especially in a rising market. "Identifying good value opportunities is difficult in a runaway bull market, as stocks move from value to expensive in no time. Even if you have identified a long-term winner, as valuations move up and the stock gets re-rated, there is the dilemma of having to switch to a more attractive value proposition, which might not be the best thing to do," says Manghat. Naren believes in the case of mid-cap stocks, it is better to sell slowly rather than deciding the peak price.

Use volatility to identify bargains
Mark Mobius , executive chairman, Templeton Emerging Markets Group, Franklin Templeton Investments

Value investors tend to invest in stocks when things are looking bad, so that they are able to invest cheaply and then wait for the market to realise the true value. In general, these investors tend to avoid paying unreasonable prices for stocks.

It can be successful in all types of markets, including high-growth ones such as India and China. It is not the type of market that dictates its success but factors such as but not limited to market sentiment, lack of knowledge/understanding, and business life cycles which leads investors to buy stocks with weak fundamentals or sell stocks with strong fundamentals.

Emerging markets have traditionally been volatile and can be dominated by retail investor flows and sentiment changes but we seek to use this volatility to identify potential bargains. We believe strong growth prospects in many emerging markets aren't always recognised in equity valuations and can lag those of developed markets by a considerable margin.

As such, select companies or sectors in our portfolios might not perform as we'd like in a given month or year, but we are long-term investors, not short-term traders and we abide by our sell discipline.

We think the best indicator of whether a stock is a good value or has lost its lustre (what one might call 'a value trap') or fallen but still expensive relative to its intrinsic value boils down to growth. If we don't see any growth potential, a company isn't worth investing in; but if it's inexpensive and earnings projections look good there can be a case to invest. Of course, when a particular stock market is rapidly rising, it can be harder to find individual values.

If a stock approaches what we deem to be fair value, we could consider reducing a position.

Excerpts from an email interview with Ashley Coutinho

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Value Investing Decoded - 31Mar2015 - S Naren

S Naren, CIO of ICICI Prudential AMC


  • Buying low and selling high - contrarian 
  • Growth Investing - buying when things are good. Not against the crowds.
  • Currently metal and some oil related stocks are cheap
  • Seth Klarman quote - "Value Investing is being contrarian with a calculator"
  • Buying in panic usually good idea
  • The best investment opportunities is mostly in the slow changing industries
  • Buy during panic and sell during mania
  • Looks for negative news to pick up stocks



Sunday, February 1, 2015

Sankaran Naren shares his insights gained from investing gurus


ICICI Prudential's Sankaran Naren shares his insights gained from investing gurus
2 Feb, 2015, 08.00AM IST
By Sankaran Naren

Value investing is the art of picking great stocks when they are attractively priced. Here's knowledge gleaned from the teachings of three well regarded names in this field.


JAMES MONTIER
In his book on value investing, he lists out the rules that can help you pick stocks that can give spectacular returns in the long term.

Value, value, value
Warren Buffett famously invested (top down) when the economy was at its worst. Post-Lehman Brothers, when in 2008 it was in a shambles, he scooped up preference shares of GE and Goldman. He didn't look at the general economic situation, but that macro-economic environment ensured that the gap in price and intrinsic value of an investment was so wide that it proved worthwhile to invest.

Be contrarian, Be patient
Buyers and sellers set prices. Too many buyers push up prices; too many sellers push them down. When sellers are a-plenty, buying is easy. Montier says to wait on one's investments for a very long time. That's the only way they can grow.

Be unconstrained
At times, global equities are inexpensive; other times, debt, midcaps or commodities are. So, one has to go outside one's sphere (or benchmarks) to gain returns.

Don't forecast
Six months ago who knew crude oil would be below $50. Almost no one had a clue that Brent would slide. Such situations are found in assets and currencies

Be sceptical
Scepticism prevents mistakes. That does not mean be cynical. Investors who were sceptical in 2007 gained good experience between 2007 and 2009, as they better withstood market troughs.

Cycles matter
Investors don't grasp market cycles, which plague all asset classes. At the top of a cycle, people are bullish; at the bottom, they are bearish. Three or four years ago, they said the dollar would weaken. From then till now, however, it has been strengthening. We periodically traverse cycles.

Treat your clients as you treat yourself
Investors have to gain investment experience. So, fund managers should invest clients' money as they would invest for themselves, knowing where real value lies. Treat clients as you treat yourself, and plenty of money will be made.

History matters
Today, the price of crude has slumped due to which some countries are in trouble. Check similar situations in the past. Buffett says matters have been improving. So Montier's model is easy to practice. However, it involves pain in troubled times, particularly during a bubble, but it has worked.


MICHAEL MAUBOUSSIN
He teaches you to assume what is likely to happen and act accordingly to reduce mistakes.

Do a pre-mortem
The intriguing insight I obtained was during the general elections in 2009. We had conducted a post-mortem on what we had done before the election. But then we realised that the manner in which we handled the elections was not quite right. Mauboussin says, "Do a pre-mortem", ie, assume what is likely to happen. So, before the elections in 2013, we did a pre-mortem. We found equities a great asset class. The pre-mortem suggested we needed great effort on our part to get investors into equity, which we did. A post-mortem is OK. But, approaching investing with the various options before you of what could happen would reduce mistakes. It also helps us become less emotional


HOWARD MARKS
According to him, investing is common sense. What is important is controlling one's emotions as an investor.

Respect cycles
At certain times a pendulum is positive. Other times, it is not. In both situations, act contrarion. Often, it is in the middle. No sense then in extreme views (positive or negative). Such cycles are commonplace in all markets in all asset classes. Recognise such cyclicality.

Risk is a function of price
Buying the best company in the world at a very high price can be a high-risk investment. Similarly, distressed assets, which are inexpensive, are low risk. Hence, Marks states: if you focus on price you can buy a consumer company and lose money. Or you can make money purchasing a distressed real-estate company.

Either you are trying to make money or trying not to lose it
Most people (even fund managers) don't realise that you have to try to make money, or try not to lose it. A year back if you were trying the former, investing in smalland mid-caps, it actually made money. Whereas last year, if you were trying the latter, investing in the safest stocks (consumer goods, healthcare), you actually avoided losing money.

Investing is common sense. Controlling emotions, however, is key
Over time, everyone recognises that investing requires much common sense. That sounds easy. The problem is to control emotions. That is difficult, particularly in a bubble. In 2000, avoiding buying information-technology stocks was difficult. How to control emotions is the biggest long-term task.

(The author is the CIO, ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund)