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Interview

Interview with Cliff Asness

A long watch but well worth your time.

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Excerpts

Time to strip

Source:Manoj Nagpal

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Excerpts

Warren Buffett the Trader

An analysis of Berkshire Hathaway’s quarterly SEC Form 13F filings during 1980-2006 (2,140 quarter-stock observations) reveals that:

  • Berkshire Hathaway tends to invest in large firms with low book-to-market ratios and large accounting accruals, while avoiding firms with high asset growth and poor past returns.
  • Holdings are concentrated and tilted toward banking, business services, insurance and publishing. The number of stocks held ranges from 5 to 95. The average numbers of stocks held during the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s are 22, 12 and 33, respectively.
  • The median holding period is one year, with approximately 20% (30%) of stocks held for more than two years (less than six months).
  • Over the 1980-2006  sample period, Berkshire Hathaway’s annualized abnormal return from stock holdings (adjusted for market, size, book-to-market and momentum factors) is 7.2%. These returns are substantially independent of those for well-known pricing anomalies, suggesting that Warren Buffett has unique insights regarding future returns.
  • A value-weighted (equal-weighted) portfolio that mimics Berkshire Hathaway’s holdings, reformed quarterly based on company filings, generates an annualized abnormal return of 6% (6.6%) over the entire sample period.
  • When Berkshire Hathaway announces an increase in a stock position, the average market-adjusted return for the stock is 0.7% to 0.9% over the next five days and two weeks, respectively. The immediate price reaction therefore tends to be very incomplete.
  • Net stock sales by insiders (officers, directors, and major stockholders) of companies in which Berkshire Hathaway has a position tend to decrease when Berkshire Hathaway increases its positions, indicating shared private information-

from CXO Advisory

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Links

Linkfest:November 19,2015

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Market not capturing your expenses (Subramoney)

Buy Side Vs Sell Side (Common Sense)

Who defrauded Bank of Baroda of 375 Crores? (CapitalMind)

The secret of Rakesh Jhunjhunwala’s success (Mint)

Should IPO investors go for short term pop or long term gains? (Mint)

Reliance Infra is becoming a Defence play (BS)

Sugar scrips on fire (Gaurav)

To be great,you must first be good (TRB)

5 Things Smart Beta can’t do for you (TRB)

Chinese savers turn to gold (Bloomberg)