14-06-2021, 01:29 PM
(This post was last modified: 14-06-2021, 01:38 PM by specuvestor.)
Inversely, Book Value is the best ESTIMATOR of intrinsic value for Berkshire value for past 50 years, if one doesn't want to spend too much time in different components of the businesses. To be roughly right rather than precisely wrong
And this book value, over or understated, affects the ROE of the entity so it helps to balance out in some sense when you adjust by price to book that you pay. Understanding the underlying business and cash flow is always better without a doubt.
As for tech stocks it's similar in that you pay high price to book but your ROE adjusted by price to book continues to grow. The problem with tech is as per my example above, the difficulty to forecast earnings stream in the development stage.
And just a side note on Amazon, which is not a development stage company anymore, it's interesting that till now few people realise their strategy is simply to have zero profit and cashflow positive, not aiming for negative profit or cash burn like many startups. You can have zero profit for extended period of time; but you cannot have negative profit for extended period of time. So the business model actually already shows that profit is not a good way to understand the company
In 2016 retained earnings was $4.9b from $1.9b in 2012; vs $52.5b in 2020, when past few years they have been finally shifting on raising operating margin to monetise their mindshare. End of day still their ability to GROW the book value via ROE over time period (that you are able to stay with them). When their ROE comes down their price to book will also come down.
And this book value, over or understated, affects the ROE of the entity so it helps to balance out in some sense when you adjust by price to book that you pay. Understanding the underlying business and cash flow is always better without a doubt.
As for tech stocks it's similar in that you pay high price to book but your ROE adjusted by price to book continues to grow. The problem with tech is as per my example above, the difficulty to forecast earnings stream in the development stage.
And just a side note on Amazon, which is not a development stage company anymore, it's interesting that till now few people realise their strategy is simply to have zero profit and cashflow positive, not aiming for negative profit or cash burn like many startups. You can have zero profit for extended period of time; but you cannot have negative profit for extended period of time. So the business model actually already shows that profit is not a good way to understand the company
In 2016 retained earnings was $4.9b from $1.9b in 2012; vs $52.5b in 2020, when past few years they have been finally shifting on raising operating margin to monetise their mindshare. End of day still their ability to GROW the book value via ROE over time period (that you are able to stay with them). When their ROE comes down their price to book will also come down.
(01-06-2021, 09:29 PM)Wildreamz Wrote:(01-06-2021, 07:55 PM)specuvestor Wrote: Berkshire Annual Report consistently use Book Value as an indicator of worth
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In the past, Book Value has been used by Berkshire as a rough (quick and dirty) proxy of it's intrinsic value.
2000 Shareholder meeting (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/warren-bu...49202.html):
Quote:In our case, when we started with Berkshire, intrinsic value was below book value.
Our company was not worth book value in early 1965. You could not have sold the assets for that price that they were carried on the books, you could not have -- no one could make a calculation, in terms of future cash flows that would indicate that those assets were worth their carrying value. Now it is true that our businesses are worth a great deal more than book value. And that's occurred gradually over time. So obviously, there are a number of years when our intrinsic value grew greater than our book value to get where we are today...
As Berkshire's business and portfolio change over the years, its intrinsic value's correlation with book value has drifted further and further apart.
2018 Shareholder's letter (https://www.gurufocus.com/news/1319777/b...ires-value):
Quote:The fact is that the annual change in Berkshire's book value which makes its farewell appearance on page 2 is a metric that has lost the relevance it once had.
Three circumstances have made that so.
First, Berkshire has gradually morphed from a company whose assets are concentrated in marketable stocks into one whose major value resides in operating businesses. Charlie and I expect that reshaping to continue in an irregular manner.
Second, while our equity holdings are valued at market prices, accounting rules require our collection of operating companies to be included in book value at an amount far below their current value, a mismark that has grown in recent years.
Third, it is likely that over time Berkshire will be a significant repurchaser of its shares, transactions that will take place at prices above book value but below our estimate of intrinsic value. The math of such purchases is simple: Each transaction makes the per-share intrinsic value go up, while the per-share book value goes down.
That combination causes the book-value scorecard to become increasingly out of touch with economic reality."
A simple demonstration why Book Value is a poor indicator of Tech and Growth companies in general. Amazon's book value in early 2016 was approximately $15bil and net income was $1.1 bil; market cap was $300bil (20x price to book).
Today it earns around $27bil TTM net income on book value of $103bil.
Most analysts' linearly extrapolated projections would have missed the mark by a large degree. But analysts who understood exponential growth rates, market strength (near monopoly), and TAM of it's retail, ads and AWS businesses would have understood why it was valued that way.
Before you speak, listen. Before you write, think. Before you spend, earn. Before you invest, investigate. Before you criticize, wait. Before you pray, forgive. Before you quit, try. Before you retire, save. Before you die, give. –William A. Ward
Think Asset-Business-Structure (ABS)
Think Asset-Business-Structure (ABS)