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…to
suppose that the value of a common stock is determined purely by a
corporation’s earnings discounted by the relevant interest rates and
adjusted for the marginal tax rate is to forget that people have burned
witches, gone to war on a whim, risen in defense of Joseph Stalin and
believed Orson Welles when he told them over the radio that the Martians
had landed. ~ James Grant
An
investment operation is one which, upon thorough analysis promises
safety of principal and an adequate return. Operations not meeting these
requirements are speculative.
~ Benjamin Graham and David L. Dodd
In
general, Americans feel pretty darned smart when it comes to handling
money. Since the stock market crash of October 19, 1987, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average has gone from 1,738.40 to a March 14, 2005 closing
price of 10,804.51. Granted, many people lost money when the dot.com and
telecom bubbles burst, yet Americans remain unshaken in their collective
belief that staying in the stock market will make them wealthy in the
long run. To be sure, you will hear the mantra that "stocks
always go up in the long run" from diverse sources ranging from
star Wall Street analysts (such as Abbey Joseph Cohen) to your next-door
neighbor. What a dream world America has become where we can read the
business pages, watch CNBC, "invest" in can’t-lose stocks,
and then grow wealthy, over time, without much thought or effort.
When examining this prevalent mindset, using Graham and Dodd’s
distinction between investing and speculation, I must conclude that most
Americans are speculators not investors. This position is easy to
defend.
An
important aspect of investing is to have the mindset of a business
owner. In 1983, Warren Buffett conveyed 13 owner- related business
principles for Berkshire Hathaway’s shareholders to embrace. The
first principle is potent yet simple in that Warren Buffett and
Berkshire’s vice chairman – Charlie Munger – view Berkshire
Hathaway "…as a conduit through which our shareholders own the
assets." Mr. Buffett further explains that
Charlie
and I hope that you do not think of yourself as merely owning a piece
of paper whose price wiggles around daily and that is a candidate for
sale when some economic or political event makes you nervous. We hope
you instead visualize yourself as a part owner of a business that you
expect to stay with indefinitely, much as you might if you owned a
farm or apartment house in partnership with members of your family.
Indeed,
having an ownership mindset is a step toward becoming an investor, yet,
on a stand-alone basis, does not quite get you there. For if an
individual is truly an investor in a business, he would have a
basic understanding of its operations, its assets and liabilities, its
profitability, and its cash flow. Moreover, an investor would quickly
grasp the power of the following quote from Ludwig von Mises’ magnum
opus Human
Action:
Monetary
calculation is the guiding star of action under the social system of
division of labor. It is the compass of the man embarking upon
production. He calculates in order to distinguish the remunerative
lines of production from the unprofitable ones, those of which the
sovereign consumers are likely to approve from those which they are
likely to disapprove. Every single step of entrepreneurial activities
is subject to scrutiny by monetary calculation. The premeditation of
planned action becomes commercial precalculation of expected costs and
expected proceeds. The retrospective establishment of the outcome
of past action becomes accounting of profit and loss. (Emphasis
added)
A
tool businessmen use to determine the success or failure of past actions
is a financial statement. A businessman and an investor should
have a firm understanding of all the entries in a company’s balance
sheet, the income statement, and in the statement of cash flows (which
are the three key components of a financial statement). Via analyzing
the company’s financial statement, a businessman can directly
correlate whether his company's capital base (i.e., the company's net
worth as reflected in the balance sheet) is expanding or contracting
depending upon if the company turned a profit or made a loss. Such
monetary calculation assists a businessman in deciding to maintain or
change a business plan based upon satisfying the ever-sovereign
consumer.
The
analysis doesn’t stop here. Businessmen and investors will also take a
keen interest in deriving the following (among others) from the
financial statement:
-
Working
capital
-
Quick
ratio
-
Liquidity
-
Debt
to equity ratio (i.e., leverage)
-
Return
on equity
-
Total
debt service coverage
-
Inventory
turnover
-
Accounts
receivable turnover
This
may look complicated and, to a certain extent, it is. Yet, to be a true
investor, such "thorough analysis" – as mentioned above by
Graham and Dodd – is essential. Conversely, if someone cannot read a
financial statement (i.e., a balance sheet, an income statement, and a
statement of cash flows), then when it comes to purchasing common stock
in publicly traded companies, such a financially illiterate person is
inherently a speculator, not an investor. After all, such a
speculator has no idea how to value a business and merely owns a
"piece of paper whose price wiggles around daily." With
financial illiteracy being the overwhelming norm in America (let’s
face it, public schools have miserably failed at teaching basic
accounting, finance, and economics), I believe I have successfully
defended my position that most American "investors" are simply
speculators.
Now
to bring a bit of politics into the picture here. President Bush is
touting an "ownership society" in which Social Security reform
is a cornerstone – thereby allowing for personal Social Security
accounts where individuals can "invest" funds into the stock
market. I would counter that President Bush is, not surprisingly,
abusing the English language. After all, with a financially illiterate
populace (thanks again public schools), I assert that President Bush is
essentially doing nothing different from CNBC, the stock brokerage
firms, and the Wall Street Journal in that he is promoting a
"speculator society." Of course, the key difference here is
that the federal government will be coercing Americans to speculate at
gunpoint.
For those who feel that
they fit the mold of being a speculator, yet want to make the effort to
become an investor, there is hope. Let me give you a crash course. The
first step to take is to read Benjamin Graham and David L. Dodd’s
classic book
Security Analysis. This book will teach you how to read a
financial statement. The next step is to read
The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham. As Warren Buffett
stated, it is "By far the best book on investing ever written." Enough
said. Finally, you must gain an understanding of Austrian economics. Two
excellent introductory books are
Economics for Real People: An Introduction to the Austrian School
by Gene Callahan and
The Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle and Other Essays produced
by the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Keep in mind that it was the
"Austrians" who correctly identified and explained the dot.com and
telecom bubbles that left so many stock portfolios in tatters. By
combining Graham and Dodd with Austrian economics, you will have the
tools necessary to become a successful investor. After all, long-term
wealth accumulation requires a great deal of thought and effort – not
the opposite as promoted by America’s financial pop culture.

© 2005 Eric Englund
Editorial Archives
Eric
Englund has
an MBA from Boise State University and lives in the state of Oregon. He
is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You are
invited to visit his website.
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