Tuesday, April 20, 2021

The most important thing in investing - Total addressable market

I once had a conversation with a talented individual from the Value Invest Asia Premium Club on the topic of Total Addressable Market or TAM. 

This topic would be broken down into 3 parts: Sizing the TAM, what Phillip Fisher said and what it means for you.

Part 1:

1. TAM is the market size of sales of which the company is serving. A Wikipedia entry goes like this

 Total addressable market (TAM) represents the entire revenue opportunity that exists within a market for a product or service.”

This is the annual revenue of a customer per year. Being addressable, it is really about the audience or customer.

As a member of the Toastmasters club, often we frame a topic as “what is in it for me?” - looking at things through the audience eyes. Effectively, each company should look at things through their customer lens, what is the customer journey?

Howard Schultz (CEO of Starbucks) says this best when he said in a boardroom meeting, they leave one chair empty to symbolise the customer. Now whatever decision they make, imagine the customer was in the room, what would they say? How would they feel?

Example of usage:

1. Here is a sample of an analyst report taking from Barron on Enterprise AI company C3. “With a TAM [total addressable market] of $270 billion and a product portfolio that is unmatched in the enterprise landscape, we believe C3 has the ability to further penetrate enterprises and governments across the board over the coming years.” 

2. Compare this against the customer existing revenue of US$200m in FY20 and you see tremendous potential of upside....even 1% of the TAM would mean a 14x growth in sales.

Part 2: 

What legends say: Phillip Fisher 

https://news.morningstar.com/classroom2/course.asp?docId=145662&page=3&CN=sample

Phillip Fisher has a checklist of 15 things to look out for during investing. The first and foremost is this

Does the company have products or services with sufficient market potential to make possible a sizable increase in sales for at least several years? A company seeking a sustained period of spectacular growth must have products that address large and expanding markets.”

There are many parts to this but the key words is “sufficient market potential” and this of course means TAM. 

Fisher goes on further to say two scenarios - there are companies who are “able because they are lucky” and “lucky because they are able”.

Previously working at DuPont, Fisher could see that the chemical industry (lucky because they are able) had immense potential for multiple applications and products and this of course gives the drivers and possibilities for growth. Contrast this with the former - steel industry (commodity product) that grew as a result of urbanisation.

Part 3:

When you invest. Consider the industry dynamics. Whether you are a Growth or value investor, it doesn’t hurt to have a tailwind of growth in your industry rising from the ever burgeoning TAM. If anything, we should seek for companies that are growing faster than their peers in a growing TAM market. 

That’s a multibagger in the making. And knowing this will definitely increase your batting average.

Invest well.

Joel Siew


Friday, April 16, 2021

What weighs more? - Evolution of a value investor (Part 2)

In a legendary scene in Money Heist. Main character “Professor” sits and ponders while his brother is doing his marriage dance with the bride. He ask himself - What weighs more? Love or Death?




In line with difficult questions, here are 3 perplexing questions to ask as an investor.


Q1. What weighs more, earnings today or earnings in the future?

  • Do you understand a business down to its segments and what drives its CEO to do what they do?
  • Take the example of Amazon. For years they reported no profit and the stock remain volatile. But true believers could see what Jeff Bezos was doing. In fact, a video by Masayoshi Son said it best. Jeff was a long term visionary, he never said profits will come in the short run, the losses his company made were not actually losses, he just kept reinvesting in building a company that grew its footprint in terms of market share, wallet share and mind share. These were the expenses of R&D, marketing and acquisitions that would have not turned up on the balance sheet at all. 

Answer: Large durable earnings in the long run matter most. 


Q2. What weighs more, cashflow or profits?

  • Do you know a profitable company that went bust? What went wrong? Any of the following: “Fraud, mismanagement, aggressive growth etc.”
  • But the one thing that is often true is the inability to generate cashflow. In this case the operating cashflow. Cash is the oxygen to the business and it is absolutely necessary for survival. 
  • Businesses have a tendency to extend credit terms to their customers to grow their business - recording this as sales and profit. But the fact is that the only day that profits should be truly recognise is when cash is collected often seen as positive operating cash flow. After all, cashflow is harder to fudge than earnings.
  • So the best way would be as Henry Singleton of Teledyne (as written in the book The Outsiders) - using the Teledyne return = Average of Net Income and Cash Flow of each business segment. And this is a metric that all managers should focus on.

Answer: Why choose? Take the average to get the best of both worlds.


Q3. What weighs more - making money or making the world a better place? (i.e Does a business spark joy?)

  • This is a personal question - The Motley fool said it right Make your portfolio represent “your best vision of the future” 
  • Companies that make the world a better place deserve to be in your portfolio. Another way to see this is the snap test like Thanos in The avengers. If a company is snapped out of existence today - would you notice? Would you miss it?
  • A better future is debatable but it could be like this - the future could be clean and green. The future could be electric cars, extremely efficient transportation, 0 pandemics, cure for cancer, gaming as a career, entertainment of high quality at an affordable price, quality healthcare, 0 people dying from starvation and malnutrition and so on. The list goes on...


Answer: A business that sparks joy for the majority of society. One that does well by doing good will be a winner in the long run.



The answer to the professor’s question at the beginning is neither Love nor Death. But life. 


Life weighs most. 


Because we live in the now and plan for the future. The future is unknown but we remain prepared for unknowns of life by being mentally and financially secure in the present.


Save like a pessimist, invest like an optimist. 


With the above 3 questions as a framework - You will do well. I am sure of that.


Till next time. Invest well.

Joel Siew

Thursday, April 8, 2021

Worth a read. Deserves a re-read - Jamie Dimon letter 2020

https://reports.jpmorganchase.com/investor-relations/2020/ar-ceo-letters.htm


Jamie Dimon is the legendary CEO of banking. The only one left preceding over the worst crisis in 2008, Jamie remains firmly at the helm of JP Morgan in 2021.

Before we delve into the letter, here are 3 interesting facts.

1. Jamie is one of 3 sons of Greek immigrants and has a fraternal twin brother, Ted.

2. He is both a cancer and heart attack survivor.

3. He is one of a few bankers to reach billionaire status at US$1.7B. In 2016, when bank stocks were collapsing. He threw in US$26m buying JPM stock at around US$53 saying he could buy this all day long. (Note: JPM in 2021 is at US$151)

Now for the letter.


A global leader with a lens on the world, Jamie has deep insight into what is happening around the world. It pays well to note on his observations precisely because of his experience in the finance sector (which encompassed the entire aspect of the economy).

To avoid butchering a 66 pager of a gem. I encourage you read it in its entirety. Below are my favourite passages for your interest (on decision making, leadership, fintech, inflation and the upcoming economic boom)


On decision making 

Understand when analysis is necessary and when it impedes change. While I am fanatical about detail and multi- year analysis, it’s important to be cautious about its application. Assumptions are frequently involved, and small changes in a few variables can dramatically change an outcome.

Even net present value analysis fails to capture the true value of something after a certain period of time. For instance, people commonly look at the five-year net present value of a customer acquisition, which can mask the true compounding effect of keeping that client for 20 years. And we have often seen net present value analysis fail to capture ancillary benefits (like customer happiness) that can often be more important than the analysis itself.

Sometimes a new product or an investment should simply be considered table stakes meaning there’s no need to do analysis at all. Think about banks adding the capability of opening new accounts digitally, for example, or maintaining a strong technology infrastructure and adopting new technologies, like cloud or artificial intelligence (AI). These could be life-or-death decisions for a company, so instead of focusing on net present value, the emphasis should be on getting the work done properly, efficiently and quickly.

Bureaucrats can torture people with analysis, stifling innovation, new products, testing and intuition.

On leadership

Remain open to learning how to become a better leader.

As companies get bigger and more complex, leaders need to be more like coaches and conductors than players. If CEOs are running a smaller business, they can literally be involved in virtually everything and make most of the decisions – they often rely on traditional command-and-control tactics. This approach does not work as companies get bigger – the CEOs simply cannot be involved in every major decision. Command and constant feedback may be better than command and control. Here is where leaders would be better off providing clear direction and letting people do their job, including making mistakes along the way. Soft power – essentially trust and maturity – may become more important than hard power. Soft power creates respect among team members, with the coach offering honest assessment and support while allowing flexibility. Here the boss makes fewer but tougher decisions, such as removing people – when it must be done – and even then, it is handled respectfully. People will give to the best of their ability for leaders they respect and who they know are trying to help them succeed.

Respect and learn from your people. Managers and leaders get spread pretty thin. While they should have a wide grasp of many subjects, they could not possibly know everything their people know. Leaders should continually be learning from their people. They should go to a sales conference and ask lots of questions of their salespeople. Gather technology people in the room with branch managers and ask, “How are things working?” Taking a road trip should not be only for the purpose of showing the flag but also for learning from your employees and customers.

Have curiosity. It’s important to ask questions to try to understand varying points of view. Be willing to change your mind. Read everything. Don’t defend decisions of the past. Leaders should be happy when their people prove them wrong. Do not have a rigid mindset. And do not be complacent.

Skip hierarchy. If everything in a large organization must go up and down the hierar- chical ladder, bureaucratic arteriosclerosis along with CYA sets in, and that company’s life expectancy is substantially shortened.

It should be routine that data, memos and ideas are shared – skipping hierarchies – and aren’t vetted by all in the chain of command. This makes people more responsible for what they are doing, improves the dissemination of new information and new ideas, and speeds things up overall. In addition, it’s good to have a few mavericks who are not afraid to shake things up. The ones who challenge authority or convention often get far more done than the ones who go along to get along. Collaboration is wonderful, but it can be overdone.

Act at the speed of relevance. When leaders have plenty of time to make decisions, they should analyze all factors over and overtake the necessary time, as choices can be hard to reverse. And there are other decisions that are more like “battlefield promotions” where there’s no luxury of time, and, in fact, going slow may make things much worse. I’ve also seen people take a tremendous amount of time to make an unimportant decision, which just wastes time and slows things down.

In business, some decisions should be made carefully – for instance, putting the right people in the right job. But others, such as making pricing decisions, dealing with customer problems and handling reputational issues, must be done quickly, for these problems do not age well

On fintech and the competitions 

Fintech and Big Tech are here ... big time!

Fintech companies here and around the world are making great strides in building both digital and physical banking products and services. From loans to payment systems to investing, they have done a great job in developing easy-to-use, intuitive, fast and smart products. We have spoken about this for years, but this competition now is everywhere. Fintech’s ability to merge social media, use data smartly and integrate with other platforms rapidly (often without the disadvan- tages of being an actual bank) will help these companies win significant market share.

Importantly, Big Tech (Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google – and, as I said, now I’d include Walmart) is here, too. Their strengths are extraordinary, with ubiquitous platforms and endless data. At a minimum, they will all embed payments systems within their ecosystems and create a marketplace of bank products and services. Some may create exclusive white label banking relationships, and it is possible some will use various banking licenses to do it directly.

Though their strengths may be substantial, Big Tech companies do have some issues to deal with that may, in fact, slow them down. Their regulatory environment, globally, is heating up, and they will have to confront major issues in the future (banks have faced similar scrutiny). Issues include data privacy and use, how taxes are paid on digital products, and antitrust and anticompetitive issues – such as favoring their own products and services over others on their platform and how they price products and access to their platforms. In addition, Big Tech will have very strong competition – not just from JPMorgan Chase in banking but also from each other. And that competition is far bigger than just banking – Big Tech companies now compete with each other in advertising, commerce, search and social.

On inflation

... consider how surprising it is that $3.4 trillion of quantitative easing (QE) and deficit spending averaging 5% of GDP over a 10 year period after the Great Recession did not result in higher GDP growth and possibly higher inflation. As a reference point, in the mid-1970s, there was no QE – and deficit spending hit 4%, which many people thought was the main reason for the overheated economy and inflation, which, at its peak, was over 12%.

And so why did all this quantitative easing not have the effect you would have thought? QE was never effectively tried prior to the Great Recession, and it is different from fiscal spending. QE is the purchase of securities from security holders who tend to reinvest in the same or similar securities. Clearly, QE reduces interest rates, pushes up asset prices and creates some spending (through the wealth effect). QE, on the one hand, may have some inflationary effects, mostly on asset prices. But on the other hand, it also may have some disinflationary effects – lower interest rates themselves, which is an input cost for businesses, and lower income to savers – which may reduce consumption and may increase the propensity to save (e.g., we may need to set aside more money to protect retirement income). And finally, in this most recent round of QE, much of the money simply made a round trip – because of the new liquidity rules, it ended up back as deposits at the Fed, not as loans.

The fiscal deficit is, pure and simple, giving various individuals and institutions money to spend – which they will spend over time. All things being equal, this is, and always has been, inflationary. Of course, in a recessionary environment with low inflation, like after the Great Recession, this might be precisely what is needed without causing overheating or excessive inflation.

My own view: The anemic growth in the decade after the Great Recession was due to some of the factors I mention above but also due to many of the public policy failures...

The upcoming economic boom (till 2023)

In the United States, the average consumer balance sheet is in excellent shape. The consumer’s leverage is lower than it has been in 40 years. In fact, prior to the last $1.9 trillion stimulus package, we estimate that consumers had excess savings of approximately $2 trillion. Corporations also have an extraordinary amount of cash on their balance sheet estimated to be approximately $3 trillion. And the financial system and investors have already adopted more conservative leverage requirements due to regulations – so they have very little need to deleverage. The QE in this go-around will have created more than $3 trillion in deposits at U.S. banks, and, unlike the QE after the Great Recession, a portion of this can be lent out.

I have little doubt that with excess savings, new stimulus savings, huge deficit spending, more QE, a new potential infrastructure bill, a successful vaccine and euphoria around the end of the pandemic, the U.S. economy will likely boom. This boom could easily run into 2023 because all the spending could extend well into 2023. The permanent effect of this boom will be fully known only when we see the quality, effectiveness and sustainability of the infrastructure and other government investments. I hope there is extraordinary discipline on how all of this money is spent. Spent wisely, it will create more economic opportunity for everyone.

While equity valuations are quite high (by almost all measures, except against interest rates), historically, a multi-year booming economy could justify their current price. Equity markets look ahead, and they may very well be pricing in not only a booming economy but also the technical factor that lots of the excess liquidity will find its way into stocks. Clearly, there is some froth and speculation in parts of the market, which no one should find surprising. As Captain Louis Renault said in Casablanca, “I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!” 

As Mario Gabelli said - Worth a read. And deserves a re-read.

Till next time. Invest well

Joel Siew

Musings on cryptocurrencies, NFT and GCB



Here are some quick thoughts on something that is red hot in the market.

1. Cryptocurrency is a better form of store of value than gold. Being digital it is easily transferred, sold and stored in very small spaces (e.g. thumbdrives)

2. It is irrefutable that Bitcoin has been the asset of the decade with 200%+ compounded annual return since 2011-2020. See source by Charlie Biello below.

3. As a value investor “trained” from the learnings of Benjamin Graham, Warren Buffett and Phillip Fisher. We know that at the end of the day, value is what the product or company brings to society. Consider the following:

A. We pay for a standup comedy to laugh and be entertained.

B. We pay for transportation to fetch us from location A to location B.

C. We pay for a brand new mobile phone because it may be faster, more intuitive or have some brand new feature like a 20 megapixel camera.

Society pays for things that bring value to them, whether explicit or implicit. As investors, any asset may be classified into productive assets or non productive assets. 


Productive vs non-productive assets

An example of a productive asset is a real estate which you can lease out, provide shelter for another family.

A non-productive asset would be gold for it simply sits there till it is picked up or sold.

Cryptocurrency by itself produces no cash flow. So it falls under non-productive assets or a commodity. But based on increasing use cases, society has been evolving to value intangibles higher than that of tangibles. If this is a trend, the shift towards digital asset may only be just beginning. 

Record purchases and the new trends

Consider in Singapore 2 recent record purchases - how an NFT recently set a record of being sold for S$93m while a GCB (size 32,159 soft) was sold at S$128.80m to the wife of a recent billionaire’s wife (Ms Jin Xiao Qun from Nanofilm)

This draws parallels in a world. The buyer of the NFT - the first 5000 days believe the digital asset is worth 1 billion dollars while no one would expect the GCB to be worth a billion someday.

But if the world is to be inherited by the young. And the millennials continue the trend towards buying digital assets, being asset light or minimalistic through renting their homes and living on the gig economy. Perhaps there could be a case for the future of digital assets.

After all, a digital shopfront on Lazada may reach anywhere from 100 - 1000 customers a day as opposed to a physical shopfront in a mall.

Technology is anything that does something better. So perhaps the transfer of value and payment (currently in cash or digital cash) could be done better via crypto.

In that context, if the use cases for crypto rises with institutional adoption. It certainly will have a place in one’s portfolio in the near or distant future. As always, never invest in any asset more than what would affect your sleep should it go to 0 (the sleep number being your % of portfolio in that asset class).

Till next time, invest well.

Joel Siew







Tuesday, April 6, 2021

Musings on Bill Miller

When I was in university, a gentleman in school was pitching to be a university lecturer at NTU. He spoke about two legends in investing Peter Lynch and Bill Miller.

Peter Lynch retired as a multi millionaire with an unrivalled track record for the ages. If he stayed on he would probably be like Warren Buffett. But he retired in 10 years so we would never know then.

Bill Miller beat the market for a while, 14 years to be exact. A one in 2.3 million chance.... Until he didn’t. Yet he continues to be admired in the fund industry. Here’s why.

1. He is a value investor at heart even if he buys high PE stock. Here’s a quote from Wikipedia

“Value investing means really asking what are the best values, and not assuming that because something looks expensive that it is, or assuming that because a stock is down in price and trades at low multiples that it is a bargain … Sometimes growth is cheap and value expensive. . . . The question is not growth or value, but where is the best value … We construct portfolios by using ‘factor diversification.' . . . We own a mix of companies whose fundamental valuation factors differ. We have high P/E and low P/E, high price-to-book and low-price-to-book. Most investors tend to be relatively undiversified with respect to these valuation factors, with traditional value investors clustered in low valuations, and growth investors in high valuations … It was in the mid-1990s that we began to create portfolios that had greater factor diversification, which became our strength …We own low PE and we own high PE, but we own them for the same reason: we think they are mispriced. We differ from many value investors in being willing to analyze stocks that look expensive to see if they really are. Most, in fact, are, but some are not. To the extent we get that right, we will benefit shareholders and clients.[1]

2. He beat the market from 1991-2005 and was an early picker of Amazon when nobody fancied it.

3. He remains relevant with his thoughts about Bitcoin. Here is a passage from his 2020 Q4 writeup.

“Finally, a few thoughts on bitcoin, the best performing asset category in 2020. At this writing, it is trading at over $31,000, up more than 50% since the middle of December. It has outperformed all major asset classes over the past 1, 3, 5, and 10 years. Its market capitalization is greater than JP Morgan and greater than Berkshire Hathaway and yet it is still very early in its adoption cycle. The Fed is pursuing a policy whose objective is to have investments in cash lose money in real terms for the foreseeable future. Companies such as Square, MassMutual, and MicroStrategy have moved cash into bitcoin rather than have guaranteed losses on cash held on their balance sheet. Paypal and Square alone are estimated to be buying on behalf of their customers all of the 900 new bitcoins mined each day. Bitcoin at this stage is best thought of as digital gold yet has many advantages over the yellow metal. If inflation picks up, or even if it doesn’t, and more companies decide to diversify some small portion of their cash balances into bitcoin instead of cash, then the current relative trickle into bitcoin would become a torrent. Warren Buffett famously called bitcoin “rat poison.” He may well be right. Bitcoin could be rat poison, and the rat could be cash.”

Read the full letter here (https://millervalue.com/bill-miller-4q-2020-market-letter/)

Till next time. Invest well.

Joel Siew