Trades and observations from a British contrarian stock investor

This blog is not intended to give financial advice. Before investing, do your own research and consult your financial adviser if appropriate. The accuracy of any information included is not guaranteed and may be subject to conjecture or interpretation by Contrarian Investor. Therefore visitors should validate all facts using alternative sources where possible.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Some of the top contrarian investors of our time and what we can learn from them

David Dreman
Dreman was once described by Kiplinger's magazine as the "consummate contrarian". His Kemper-Dreman High Return Fund was one of the best performing mutual funds ever in the U.S., being no.1 versus its comparative group for ten years from 1998. Dreman is author of the books, "Contrarian Investment Strategies: The next generation", "Psychology and the stock market".Dreman's investment strategy whilst running his High Return Fund was to focus on buying stocks that were either overlooked by other investors or beaten down by the market. In Dreman's view, investors tend to overreact to market conditions and routinely either under value or over value companies depending on what sector is "hot" at the current time and also overeact to market surprises such as profits warnings. Dreman's view was that by owning stocks that were currently in favour, any negative event has a serious downside whilst positive "surprises" would have little impact. He advises going against the crowd by buying stocks that are cheap because of an overreaction or fear on the basis of key financial measures. He also believes that a major market crisis like the one that occurred during 2008 and early 2009 as an outstanding opportunity to profit - "buy during a panic, don't sell".

In Contrarian Investment Strategies, there is an analysis of he calls the "major postwar crises" e.g. Gulf War, 1979 oil crisis. Apart from the Berlin blockade, one year after these crises the market on average was up between 22.9% and 43.6%, with an average of 25%. Two years after these events, the average gain was 37.5%.

Dreman bought stocks on the basis of 4 measures: earnings, cash flow (after tax earnings, adding back depreciation and other non cash charges), book value (value of a company's stock less all liabilities and preferred shares), and yield. His company focuses on those stocks with a market capitalisation of around $2 billion, a rising earnings trend quarter on quarter, a strong current ratio of at least 2 (measures the ratio of current assets to liabilities which is a measure of a company's ability to pay its short term debts).



However a valuable lesson for potential contrarian investors is to avoid being over aggressive in a concentrated sector when the market is in a particularly volatile positon. In April 2009, Dreman was fired as manager of the $2.2 billion DWS Dreman High Return Equity Fund after the fund lost 47% of its value over the previous 12 months. He aggressively bought beaten down financial stocks, based on a belief that the widespread pessimism on the industry was overdone. Unfortunately he was proved to be very wrong in his contrarian view of these financial stocks. In 1999, Dreman was also fired after his decision to avoid internet stocks led to his funds significantly under performing over the period. After being fired, he made returns well ahead of the market in the following few years. The difference between this period and that of 2008/2009 is that Dreman avoided try to generate big speculative gains in pursuit of a more conservative and medium-term approach. 


Warren Buffett
Buffett is known as the greatest investor of all time and is one of the richest men in the world. The so called "sage of Omaha" is Chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, a company which has an average annual return to investors of 24% since the 1960's. Berkshire Hathaway was originally acquired in the 1960's and was a textile mill in Massachussets before being used a vehicle for acquisitions of other unrelated businesses. Buffett uses the same investment philosophy as Benjamin Graham in his famous book, "The Intelligent Investor". In 2008, Buffett said "It comes about from having an investment philosophy grounded in the idea that a stock is a piece of a business. If you look at it that way, there's no reason to get excited whether some analyst is recommending it or the company is splitting the shares two-for-one, or whatever. The only way to drive the extraneous thoughts out of your mind is to have a philosophy. And for us that philosophy comes from benjamin Graham and the Intelligent Investor, especially chapters 8 and 20. It's not very complicated stuff." He famously avoided the tech crash in 2000 because he said he didn't undertstand tech companies and he only invests in companies he can "get his head around". He avoids speculation and invests for the long term. He guiding principles when buying stocks are: 1) Consistent earnings growth 2) good return on equity 3) a simple business model 4) good management 5) large purchase 6) will to take an offer price. He also looks for an "enduring moat" i.e. a competitive advantage that is difficult to replicate. Buffett looks for "consumer monopolies" where a company's positon is virtually unassailable because of a strong market position or premier brand. Alternatively he may look at a company with the lowest production costs in the industry which would be difficult to replicate by a competitor.



Marc Faber
Faber, known as "Dr Doom" and for his newletter, "Gloom, Boom and Doom Report " He was a managing director at Drexel Burnham Lambert Ltd Hong Kong office from the beginning of 1978 until the firm's collapse in 1990, a company known for its dominance of junk bond trading during his tenure. The company ultimately failed after being mired in criminal and SEC investigations. In 1990, he set up his own business, Marc Faber Limited, which acts as an investment advisor concentrating on value investments with tremendous upside often based on contrarian investment philosophies. Faber is famous for advising his clients to get out of the stock market one week before the October 1987 crash, forecasting the end of the Japanese bubble in 1990 and calling the bottom of the market in March 2009.

John Neff
John Neff managed the Windsor Fund for more than 30 years which averaged a return of 13.7% during the years 1964 to 1995 when he was running the fund against a gain of 10.6% in the S&P 500. He had a similar approach to Buffett in not spending lavishly on corporate premises and buying a modest property. In his book, "John Neff on Investing" he talks about his focus on beaten down stocks with low price/earning's ratio's, that had posted new 52 week lows or had published a particularly bad piece of news. In fact Neff described himself as a "low price-earnings investor" targeting companies with a p/e 40-60% below the market average, believing that stocks with a high p/e had so much expectation built into them that they often fell at the slightest piece of bad or even expected news. On the contrary, companies with low p/e's, had the benefit that "indifferent financial performance by low p/e companies seldom exacts a penalty". Neff seperated the badly run low p/e companies by looking at earnings growth, buying companies with consistent and "reasonable" growth i.e. more than 6% but not more than 20%. He believed that firms with a very high earnings growth had too much risk. Another Key part of his approach, was to look for stocks with a good dividend payout, for this reason he focused on total return (EPS Growth plus dividend yield). Finally he would make sure the free cash flow was strong.

Neff talks about the the difficulty of deciding when to sell a stock. He says "investors fall in love with a winning stock and hold onto it too long - particulary when their contrarian stance has been vindicated". May investors fear that they will sell winners too soon and miss out on even greater gains but Neff said "Instead of groping for the last dollar, we gladly left some upside on the table. Catching market tops was not our game. This was preferable to getting caught in a subsequent downdraft, which is never a pretty picture". Neff sold stocks when there was deterioration in the stock's fundamentals (earnings growth) or it's price approached the target set when it is was bought.

Anthony Bolton
Anthony Bolton is widely regarded to be the U.K.'s most successful fund manager. Over twenty five years he delivered a market-beating annual return of 20% in his Fidelity Special Situations Fund, 7 % higher than for for the FTSE All-Share index. In his book, "Investing Against the Tide - lessons from a life running money", he talks about his contrarian style. Much of his success came from buying stocks in turnaround situations. A key element in this approach is to meet with the management and satisfying himself that they know what they're doing and can execute their plans.

Using technical indicators and charts, he attempts to establish where we a company is in its cycle and invests accordingly. Bolton's philosophy is that you have to do something different to the market in order to achieve superior returns, "if you want to outperform other people, you have got to hold something different from other people. If you want to outperform the market, as everyone expects you to do, the one thing you mustn't hold is the market itself." He focused on stocks with recovery potential, who had unrecognised growth, had a unusually low and unjustified valuation based on its earnings or had takeover potential,.

Couldn't resist Rockhopper at these levels

With the huge fall out from the Desire Petroleum (DES) Liz well on all the Falkland Island drillers, the next prospect on Ocean Guardian drilling schedule looks interesting. During the previous drilling campaign by Shell in the 1998, oil was found on the Rockhopper prospect that the Ocean Guardian will start to drill early in April. After my holdings were sold automatically this morning falling through guaranteed stops, I have perhaps foolishly decided to reinvest back in Rockhopper (RKH) with a smaller position in Falklands Oil and Gas (FOGL). Having fallen from around 85p to its current 41.5p since January after the current 12p decline, the fall seems to have been overdone as the geological structure on Rockhopper's prospects are different to Desire's and I believe largely unrelated (not being a geologist). RKH's market capitalisation is only £76 million, despite a £50 million placing at the end of 2009, versus Desire's £167 million (it was over £300 million prior to today's announcement). The news flow in coming weeks will be largely from Rockhopper so I can see many Desire investors jumping ship to RKH to perhaps recoup some of the heavy losses. Speculative, but lets see what happens!

Norseman Gold looks solid Australian gold mining play

An article in this week's Investor's Chronicle, "My top Gold picks by Jim Slater" caught my attention, in particular what Jim had to say about Norseman Gold plc. "A gold mining share that ticks all the boxes for me is Norseman Gold (NGL.). It is in Western Australia and has been mining gold for 70 years. Cash in hand is A$23m (£14m) and future production is unhedged. Chief Executive Barry Cahill is hard working, experienced and capable, and has a substantial stake in the company. There are 3 mines with narrow vein nuggety deposits that feed a mill with a present capacity of 140,000 ounces of gold a year. Another mine, North Royal, is coming on stream later this year and there is potential for more mines as and when the capacity of the mill is upgraded. This year's production has been disappointing, with the target recently reduced to 65,000 ounces. However, the company's guidance for the year commencing July 1st 2010 is unchanged at 110,000 ounces. In the following year an increase to 140,000 ounces is likely, at which level operating costs should be reduced to about A$600 per ounce. With gold at say $1100 per ounce (A$1200 £726) this would give an operating profit of A$600 per ounce - A$84 a year compared with a market capitalisation of only A$128 million. Further exploration, administration expenses and tax would reduce net profit to A$45-50m. The prospective cash flow is so strong that I would be keen to invest in the company if it made widgets."

Norseman Gold (NGL) is both a UK AIM and Australian ASX listed Australian gold production company. The Company was listed on AIM in April 2007 and on the ASX on 25 June 2009. It acquired the Norseman Gold Project in May 2007, Australia's longest continually running gold operation. The Norseman Gold Project is located in the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia in the highly prospective Norseman-Wiluna greenstone belt, 725km east of Perth and 186km from Kalgoorlie. Gold was first found on the Norseman field in 1894 and over the last 65 years it has produced over 5.5 million oz of gold. The mine is currently producing from two high-grade narrow-vein underground mines - the Bullen and the Harlequin. Currently, it has a total resource inventory of 3.7 million oz of gold at an average grade of 5.5 g/t. The tenements cover a 1,614 sq km area centred on the Norseman Township. The landholding comprises 179 contiguous tenements consisting of 13 Exploration Licences, 106 Mining Licences, 45 Prospecting Licences, 15 Miscellaneous Licences and 29 Mining Lease Applications. Reserves from the Norseman Project were 0.4 mn oz of gold (1.4 mn tonnes at a grade of 8.9g/t of gold), an increase of 29% from a year earlier.

The company also has three development projects: OK Decline, North Royal and Crown Reef:

– OK Decline: The Group recently approved the development of OK Decline, adding a third mine to the Norseman Gold Project. The initial life of the mine is two years, based on OK Decline reserves of 57,000 oz of gold. The company initially expects to mine 5,000 ounces and 30,000 oz in 2009-10 and 2010-11, respectively, from the Star of Erin, which is one of the three mineralised structures of OK Decline.

– North Royal: The Group has initiated pit dewatering and surface diamond drilling at North Royal. . First round drilling on the southern end of the pit has returned promising results particularly around a footwall structure with follow-up extensional and infill drilling will commence this month. Mining is expected to commence by the last quarter of the 2010 calendar year.

– Crown Reef: Historically, the Crown Reef mine was a major producer within the field. However, it is currently inactive. Surface drilling operations that have recently commenced intersected a structure in the expected position in the initial drill holes with assay results currently pending.

The Company's strategy is focused on extending the mine life through the conversion of resources into reserves and identifying additional resources and obtaining additional ore for the operating mill through the development of a third and subsequent mines.

In early March the shares fell 17 percent to a six month low after the miner cuts its full-year production outlook for the year ending June 2010 to 65,000 ounces from 75,000 ounces prompting Investec Securities to reduce its price target on the stock to 52 pence from 80 pence citing increased cost per ounce on this reduced production.
This morning, the company announced that non-executive director David Steinepreis last week bought 56,750 shares in the company on the market for a total of A$39,965, and he now holds 4,313,857 shares in Norseman.
For the year ending June 2011, revenues are expected to be around £111 million with earnings per share (EPS) of £5.83.  Putting the company of a forward p/e of 0.1 based on the current share price of 49.5p. Today I initiated a position at 47p based on an expectation of signficantly increased production in 2010/2011, very strong cash flow increases based on a reduced cost per ounce and interesting development programmes. The fact that the company has a strong balance sheet also adds to the positive story with a cash balance of £14 million.

Falkland Island Oil explorers blast down through guaranteed stops

The Falkland Island drillers (Desire Petroleum, Falkland Island and Gas, Rockhopper and Borders and Southern) are sharply down this morning on Desire's Liz news. The shares were in auction (a period of time when there is no automatic execution on an order book and where Orders that are allowed during auctions may be entered during this period) but are now in full trading. Desire is down 63% at 36p, Rochopper is down 40% at 31p, Falklands Oil and Gas is down 15% at 115p. Fortunately the decision to move into CFDs with guaranteed stops ws sensible with all stops being triggered at the open. Today just shows the potential volatility of oil explorers on a "no show". Feeling a little bruised this morning. Ouch!! 

Desire Petroleum Liz field update broadly confirms Times story


Following the Times article yesterday which stated that the Liz field drilling had not encountered commercial quantities of oil, Desire Petroleum have today released an RNS (see below). The key part of the RNS "oil may be present in thin intervals but that reservoir quality is poor" indicates that the Times story was broadly correct although further testing is clearly in progress. Things aren't going to go well for the share price this morning when the market opens at 8am.

Due to recent press speculation, Desire Petroleum wishes to announce that the Liz 14/19-1 well, in the North Falkland Basin, has reached a depth of 3570 metres and logging is underway.
The primary Liz target was encountered at around 2550 metres with indications of hydrocarbons while drilling. Subsequent logging operations have shown that oil may be present in thin intervals but that reservoir quality is poor. Wireline sampling is still to be carried out. Deeper gas shows have also been encountered while drilling, particularly below 3400 metres and these have still to be evaluated by wireline logging and sampling.
Until the logging is complete and the results analysed it will not be possible to determine the significance of the hydrocarbons encountered and whether the well will need to be drilled deeper, suspended for testing or plugged and abandoned.
Operations are expected to be completed later this week when a full announcement will be made.