DailyWealth Investment Newsletter  

About DailyWealth Premium Content DailyWealth Archive
DailyWealth Investment Newsletter DailyWealth Contributors DailyWealth Resources DailyWealth Market Window
 
DailyWealth Print Edition Print Edition | Sponsored Link:
True Wealth Login

How to Instantly Acquire the Knowledge of the World's Most Successful Investors
By Dan Ferris, editor, Extreme Value
January 17, 2008

What would you do if you had a soccer ball coming at you at 50 miles an hour and less than a second to react?

Goalkeepers on professional soccer teams face this situation a few times each game. It's called a penalty kick. The victim of the penalty gets to kick the ball straight at the goalie.

Aside from looking like a lot of fun, this situation is valuable for you and me as investors. It's a great way to understand one of the biggest mistakes investors make: being too active.

The goalie can do three things. He can dive left, dive right, or stay put. As you'd logically assume, staying put in the center is the right thing to do. When the kick is to the center, goalies stop it about 60% of the time. When the kick is left, and the goalie dives left, his success rate falls to just below 30%. When the kick goes right, and the goalie dives right, his success rate is even worse, about 25%.

Logic suggests that most goalies should stay center most of the time, since diving left and right don't work out as well. And what do most soccer goalies actually do? Roughly 94% of the time, they dive left or right. Top goalkeepers said it just feels like they are at least making an effort when they dive. They feel like they're being lazy if they just stay in the center. It feels right to just do something, to make an effort. And it feels wrong to make the least effort.

Contrast the goalkeepers' bias toward action (shared by day traders and other hyperactive souls) with a Warren Buffett quote I've come to agree with over the years: "Lethargy bordering on sloth remains the cornerstone of our investment style."

Since being overactive as a goalie, analyst, or investor is clearly crazy, it's a great idea to seek "professional help" for the cure.

Seeking professional help means buying stocks – like Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway – run by great investors who know how to sit on cash until a suitable investment comes along. Everyone should own at least one professional help stock, if not more.

Here's a list of my favorites, with those I've recommended in the past in italics:

Professional Help Stock

Lead Investor(s)

Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A)

Warren Buffett

White Mountains (WTM)

Ray Barrette

W.R. Berkley (BER)

William R. Berkley

Icahn Enterprises (IEP)

Carl Icahn

Leucadia National (LUK)

Ian Cumming, Joe Steinberg

Sears Holdings (SHLD)

Eddie Lampert

Fairfax Financial Holdings (FFH)

Prem Watsa

Brookfield Asset Management (BAM)

Bruce Flatt

Winthrop Realty Trust (FUR)

Michael Ashner

Vornado Realty Trust (VNO)

Steve Roth

Kimco Realty Trust (KIM)

Milton Cooper, Marty Kimmel

I highly recommend that you read the annual reports of these companies as soon as possible. You'll find amazing things. For example, in its 2005 annual report, Kimco's Milton Cooper says he and partner Marty Kimmel have bought shares every year for the past 10 years, and never sold a single one.

Professional help companies will keep you sane. As long as you hold on to them, they'll do the right thing with capital, the things most investors can't seem to do... like be patient and avoid hyperactive trading.

Disciplined investors with long-term track records of successfully outperforming the market run these companies. These investors buy assets at bargain prices and hold them for the long term – or they don't buy at all. One of them writes on his company's website, "Intellectually we really don't care much about leaving our capital lying fallow for years at a time. Better to leave it fallow and to wait for the occasional high-return opportunity. Frankly, sometimes shareholders would be better off if we just all went to play golf."

We have two professional help stocks in the Extreme Value portfolio right now: Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A) and Icahn Enterprises (IEP). Buying shares in these two companies is like hiring Warren Buffett or Carl Icahn as your personal money manager.

I recommended Icahn Enterprises in 2004 because it was controlled by Carl Icahn and it was selling for a 25% discount to book value, which I thought was very likely understated. We bought Berkshire Hathaway for similar reasons: Warren Buffett's presence and an obvious discount to intrinsic value.

So far, we're up about 60% in Berkshire and nearly 600% in Icahn Enterprises. I suspect we won't be parting with them any time soon.

Related Articles

The Myth of Passive Index Investing

The Fine Art of Sitting Still

I encourage you to become familiar with the list above of professional help stocks. If you find yourself making any "overactive" mistakes in 2008, these companies could be the solution.

Good investing,

Dan Ferris

Editor's note: Dan Ferris is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Dan Ferris.

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

THE MOST PROFITABLE CLICHÉ IN THE MARKET RIGHT NOW

Recession... Dow Down 300 Points... Home Prices Sinking. A glance at the latest financial headlines would lead your average investor to reach for the bottle.

Unfortunately, your average investor isn't in medical stocks... although he should be. The sector is dominating the "New Highs" list right now.

"BD" isn't going to produce the cure for cancer... It's simply one of the world's largest makers of scalpels, bandages, diagnostic equipment, and syringes. Sales growth came in at 10% in 2007. Next year will bring more of the same. Seeking the reliability of the medical supply business, institutional investors have sent the stock up 27% in the past year... and up 10% in just the past two weeks.  

We know it's cliché to claim health care stocks are great defensive plays when the economy is struggling... but the market doesn't care much about what is cliché and what isn't. Right now, the market is saying, "It's a bull market in all things medical."

Benton Dickiinson and Co.

– Brian Hunt

Food inflation faces more upward pressure after the US government on Friday revealed that American farmers had barely increased their sowing of cereal crops in spite of record prices.

The US agriculture department also warned of persistently low inventories, with wheat stocks at the lowest since 1947, and a massive 20 per cent reduction in corn stores.

The inventories numbers were "absolutely shocking", said Greg Wagner, an analyst at Horizon Strategies in Chicago.

"The US is going to be at the mercy of mother nature and weather conditions will be of excruciating importance this year as we really need good growing conditions," he added.

In Chicago, wheat prices for the next crop in July 2008 surged by the 30 cents daily limit to $8.06 a bushel. Corn prices hit a fresh 11-year high of $4.95 a bushel, jumping by the 20 cents daily limit. The options market, not affected by the daily limit, put prices above $5 for the first time since July 1996. Spot soyabean prices surged to an all-time high of $12.91¼ a bushel.

– Financial Times

Mortgage applications surged last week, with demand hitting its highest in nearly four years as interest rates plunged, an industry group said Wednesday.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage applications, which includes both purchase and refinance loans, for the week ended Jan. 11 surged 28.4% to 906.4, its highest since the week ended April 2, 2004.

Borrowing costs on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, excluding fees, averaged 5.62%, down 0.11 percentage points from the previous week, and its lowest since the week ended July 1, 2005, when they stood at 5.58%.
– Reuters

The New England Patriots Are Losers
January 16, 2008

A Man Richer Than Buffett and Gates... Combined
January 15, 2008

What the Worst-Case Scenario for Housing Looks Like
January 14, 2008

How China Could Push Gold to $1,000 An Ounce This Year
January 12, 2008

88% in Five Months in Safe FREE MONEY Plays... With More to Come
January 11, 2008

Home | About DailyWealth | Premium Content | DailyWealth Archive | Contributors
DailyWealth Resources | Research Reports | Privacy Policy

Customer Service: 1-888-261-2693 – Copyright 2010 Stansberry & Associates Investment Research. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This e-letter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC. 1217 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202