They have all had five- to 15-year periods of underperformance and the stock going nowhere.
Again, look at the finance sector. Frankly, I am quite appalled at all the fund managers who had 35% to 40% of their portfolio in banks and NBFCs at the beginning of this year. The economy even pre-COVID was in great difficulty, and post-COVID you know anyway where that is headed. You know this sector is highly vulnerable but somehow that risk was just not recognised even by experienced fund managers and their investors paid the price for it.
So, we do not buy into stories. We do not ‘buy and hold’ forever. And, we don’t fall in love with our stocks.
It is good to invest emotions in your friends and family, not in stocks. Stocks are only your assets. Your assets have only one objective and that is to build your wealth.
Isn’t that about getting a call wrong? If your research is thorough and you back it with conviction, the rewards could be rich…
There is always an element of luck, however skilled you may be. No one is so skilled that they will always pick all the winning bets – not even Warren Buffett.
So, first of all you have to make sure you don’t make big losses. Managing our own money is different – one can do many things, take on risks, take concentrated bets and so on.
I would say, it is almost criminal the way a lot of people manage public money in portfolios, just putting money into 10 or 15 stocks. The risk is very, very high. There are known unknowns and there are unknown unknowns always in the markets. And, you can never be sure. The future is only about probabilities. Who would have thought in January that the business of hotels and airlines would go down to zero for a long period this year? But it happened.
One of the most mind opening articles I have read in my life was The Loser’s Game by Charles Ellis. It is about a very simple concept that every game is a winner’s game or a loser’s game and how it transforms from one to the other. One of the examples is aviation. Some decades ago, to be a pilot meant that you had to be highly skilled, adventurous, make decisions on the go and only then would you be able to succeed - think dashing aviators like Charles Lindbergh and JRD Tata. So, aviation was a winner’s game. Now, it is a loser’s game, there is only one way to play, which is to make no mistake as a pilot.
Ellis also gives the example of tennis, where he says that amateur tennis and professional tennis are not the same game. Professional tennis is a winner’s game. If you look at the championships, the top seeds must serve great, play brilliantly and they might win. But, if you are playing with your friend at the local club, you only concentrate on keeping the ball in play, making no mistakes – basically ensuring that you don’t lose. Your opponent will make enough mistakes for you to win, so the outcome is decided by the loser.
Even in investing, earlier it was a winner’s game where you could find many undervalued opportunities and make loads of money. But now, it’s more of a loser’s game. You have to, first and foremost, avoid making mistakes.
When there are so many smart people competing, you cannot hope to reach the zenith every time. First, you have to make sure you don’t lose, which means avoiding the big mistakes and losses.
This year, for example, lots of mutual funds and portfolio managers just rode out the decline. Once your investors are down 30%-35%, it will take them a 50% move to even come back to zero. If you go from 100 to 65 or 70, then you have to go up 50%, which is a two- to three-year journey. You have to make sure you don’t take a hit of that sort. Risk management is key.
I was reading this book on Amazon, about when they were a store. The big takeaway for me is that, looking back we think it is one linear growth story, but the reality is that at every stage they made dozens of bets. Jeff Bezos tried out music, he tried out toys, they bought dozens of these dotcom businesses during the ‘99-2000 boom and in many of these ventures, he wrote off hundreds of millions of dollars, literally. You were in an environment where capital was easily and cheaply available to let you do that — you take dozen bets and maybe one or two work out. That is the way Amazon was built. Even Bezos did not know in advance which of his bets would have big payoffs.
Even though you don’t have unlimited capital, you should still spread your bets and then ensure that you don’t take a crippling blow on any of them.
The takeaway is that ultimately in life, it is better to make large number of small bets rather than small number of large bets. Small number of large bets may at times make you money but that’s not a predictable, replicable strategy. Recently, Wirecard went up in flames in the UK and the funds having it as their number one holding also went down with it.
So, you must limit your risk. And this year, more than any other, should have made it clear to everyone that life is not completely predictable. No matter how good you are at analysis, could you have predicted how 2020 would pan out for businesses or your own life?
People quote Warren Buffett out of context and say that, if you have high conviction, why not buy more of what you are convinced about rather than hedging your bets. But, it is not about not having skill because the fact is that this is a business of skill and luck.
It is not that you should diversify because you don’t have skill. Even if you have skill, by diversifying, the outcome becomes better. You can mathematically prove that. Chess, I think, is the only game which has only skill and no luck. Investing is certainly not that.
In fact, the most rewarding part of managing money has not been that we have been able to generate great return for our investors, it is that we have been able to do it with half the market volatility, reducing risk substantially.
All individual investors should also look at their portfolio. If you have 15 stocks, out of which six are financials and five are consumer stocks you actually do not even have diversification at the level of 15 because all the financials would tend to move together and the consumer stocks would tend to move together. Diversification means uncorrelated or at least less correlated bets. Only then the diversification is meaningful.
You were among the first broking houses to start looking at global markets. Why did you decide to go global?