Sunday, March 6, 2011

Microsoft (MSFT) Investment Thesis / Stock Analysis


Microsoft is one of the blue-chip companies that are trading today at extremely attractive prices. By any measure, Microsoft is an impressive business machine; the economics of its business allow it to achieve ROAs in excess of 20%, ROE's in excess of 40%, and net margins in excess of 20%. To top if off, Microsoft has managed to grow its revenue and earnings per share at a CAGR > 10% over the last ten years. By the numbers, this looks like a growing company with excellent financial characteristics.

Yet its share price has gone nowhere over the last ten years. With its EPS increasing over the years, its PE ratio has dropped to approximately 11 times 2011 forward earnings.

This stunning dichotomy simply demands a closer look by any investor worth his salt. This is either an unprecedented buying opportunity, or Microsoft's business is about to enter a rapid descent, which is what its current valuation suggests the herd is thinking. The latter also demands the attention of any serious investor, as a case study of how a wide moat business can lose its edge and fall into the abyss in a blink of an eye.


Microsoft's earnings streams

Microsoft is really a combination 4 separate earnings streams: (1) its profitable and well established Windows Operating System and Microsoft Office earnings stream, and (2) earnings from its server software division, where it is a competent player, and (3) earnings from its online and games division, a new area which the company is trying to break into, and (4) its nascent Azure application development cloud its Office and Exchange cloud businesses.

The bulk of Microsoft's earnings come from its Windows and Office product lines. These earnings stem from its dominance of the operating system and office productive software markets for the PC (and PC server) space. They make up the bulk of its earnings and revenue, and enjoy enviable margins.

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Sidebar: Here's how margins(net income/revenue) stack up in the software industry:
NOVL: 0% CSC: 5% RHAT: 12% SAP:15% CA: 10-16%
ADBE: 20-22% ORCL: 22-24% MSFT: 27-29%
MSFT Operating income/Revenue: Server and Tools = 33%
MSFT Operating income/Revenue: Business Division = 61%
MSFT Operating income/Revenue: Windows And Windows Live = 67%
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Valuing Microsoft broadly boils down to thing things: (1) valuing its established Windows and Office franchise, and (2) valuing its cloud, gaming and online initiatives. The first requires an analysis of the moat and sustainability of its PC based ecological niche, while the latter requires a Venture Capital type assessment of a startup's prospects. Its server software business, while competent and well executed, is not large enough to move the needle on valuing the Microsoft behemoth.

Assessing Microsoft's prospects in its new initiatives is a challenging task. As any business historian can attest, the track record of established companies successfully remaking themselves in new ecological niches is dismal. It is exceedingly difficult for established companies to innovate and enter new market spaces. A look at the history of capitalism suggests that groundbreaking innovations are usually brought to market success by startups. Established businesses have rarely been able to create, innovate and enter fundamentally new market spaces. Where they have done so, it's typically by acquiring upcoming startups.


How businesses evolve in Ecological niches, and the challenges dominant firms face in evolving with changes in the Ecology (Business Anthropology)

Most established companies are the survivors of the ecological market niche that a particular confluence of technology, fashion or the zeitgeist that happened at point in history. For example, P&G and Unilever are the dominant survivors of the ecological niche brought into existence by the advent of chemical manufacturing, mass communications, and logistics. Similarly, Coca Cola, Kraft, Nestle and Heinz are the dominant survivors of the intersection of mass manufacturing, agricultural logistics and mass communications.

The same is true in the technology industry, except that ecological niches exist for much shorter time spans. IBM was the dominant survivor of the mainframe era, but that ecological space shrank precipitously in the 70s. Digital Equipment Corporation dominated in the minicomputer space, an ecological niche which all but disappeared by the 90s with the coming of the microcomputer ecology. Microsoft and Intel are in turn, the dominant survivors of the microcomputer ecological niche.

Few large companies manage to recreate their success in new ecological spaces when their original ecological spaces expire. Polaroid and Kodak declined when their spaces declined; Newspapers, print media (and likely cable companies) are starting their decline as their ecological space is eroded by digital technology. Those that succeed in surviving the decline of their niche typically lose their dominant franchises. IBM managed to plant itself in the new ecological niche of IT services, but it no longer enjoys the franchise economics that it enjoyed during the OS/360 mainframe era. It's economics today are more of a competent well-executed business, as opposed to one enjoying franchise economics.

There are many reasons why large companies fail to do this. Clayton Christensen's The Innovators Dilemma presents one reason. I believe the primary reason is that what made them large dominant companies also makes them bad at the core innovation and flexibility needed to experiment and succeed in a new ecology. In their nascent stages, these companies were nimble startups that worked out the core value proposition and play books for their ecological niches. In any new industry in a competitive economy, thousands of startups will try their hand. Only a few find the sweet spot which consumers are willing to pay for. Of those, the dominant survivors are those who can execute the business best; with the best planning, resource allocation, logistics, and discipline to allow it to marshal resources and deliver the value best to consumers. They out sold, out delivered, and generally out planned their competition. These companies have built their measurement systems and social proof by these lines, allowing them to execute a business play book successfully.

Unfortunately this is also the type of environment that is the complete opposite of a startup. As a result, fundamental innovation is rare in dominant firms. The employees and the firm primarily excel and are measured at executing the delivery of a value proposition, a value proposition that was defined early on in the company's history and around which the entire business' hard and soft infrastructure is constructed. This isn't to say that they are completely devoid of innovation; often they excel at incremental innovation (for example Toyota), or have established systems to acquire or compete companies in in adjacent ecologies where other pathfinders have established that a market exists (for example Nestle).

Microsoft seems to exhibit the same characteristics of large dominant companies. In spite of Microsoft's enormous war chest and extremely farsighted (some would say paranoid) management who have demonstrated more vision and nimble thinking that many, its forays into the online, gaming, and non-PC niches have not been spectacular.
  • The four horseman of the Internet (Ebay, Amazon, Google and Facebook) have firmly established dominant positions in the recently evolved Internet ecological niche.

  • In the emerging mobile form-factor ecological niche (PDAs, mobile phones, tablets) Google and Apple have run away with the lead.

  • It is an open question whether Microsoft's cloud gambit will pan out. Already Google, Amazon and Force.com have already made forays into the productivity and applications hosting cloud platforms, albeit with different value propositions. (The applications cloud space is not a new one, companies like ADP have been hosting applications for decades - Before "Cloud Computing" became the buzzword of the day, applications clouds vendors were known as Application Service Providers. What has changed is that there are now a much larger range of applications which are now being delivered in this way; partly because technology now allows for it, and partly because a critical mass of software use-cases have evolved to a steady state, allowing companies to make the large capital investments needed to build cloud-delivered versions of the software without worrying so much about whether the features built will be accepted).

Valuing Microsoft

Given the dismal track record of dominant companies surviving the demise of their ecological niches, it would not be prudent when valuing MSFT, to bet that the company will be able to transform itself and dominate an upcoming ecological space. Rather, the question when valuing MSFT is:
  1. whether the PC space will continue to coexist with new ecological spaces, or whether we are at the transition between the eclipse of one space and the rise of another, and

  2. the source of MSFT's strength, and what can destroy MSFT's moat in the PC space.


Sustainability of the PC ecological space

The computing industry has been progressively shrinking the size of computers, from the mainframes to todays' PCs and mobile computers (PDAs, cell phones, netbooks). From requiring teams of people to operate a mainframe system, to allowing individuals to own and use computing. It has been about a continuous reduction in the form factor of a Turing computing unit, and removing the accidental difficulties in programming and software.

The question now is whether the PC (desktop or netbook) species is in a punctuated equilibrium within the computing ecological space - in other words, whether it is a form factor that will continue to coexist with whatever else may come along. I suspect the answer is yes. It is likely that the PC form factor is the most suitable form factor for many types of Information-based work built around the keyboard-monitor combination. This is a spectrum of work that requires textual input and concentration on the display, and the PC (desktop or laptop) is the culmination of the various evolutionary experiments of what type of machine form factor is best suited to it. The PC is likely to become another office fixture or household appliance, like a household refrigerator that coexists with wine coolers and other appliances.

This doesn't mean that the market size for this form factor will remain what it is today:
  • There are likely to be many people who are using this form factor today who would be better served by something else that comes along. These are likely to be persons whose work with the computer is less intense, or is primarily information consuming in nature. Many people who typically just browse and surf will switch away from PCs to tablets and other information consumption devices. They are now using PCs simply because there is no better option.

  • As the desktop computing usage pattern enters punctuated equilibrium, we may see the desktop replacement cycle approaching the once every 10-years replacement cycle of refrigerators - people only replace them when they break down.
Unless a larger proportion of humanity takes on desktop computing, it is entirely possible that the desktop PC market will shrink until it reaches its natural stable size.


Microsoft's moat in the PC ecological niche

The question then becomes how sustainable Microsoft's Windows and Office position is in the PC space. Windows and Office's wide moat is primarily because these 2 types of software have Platform Economics, and Microsoft has a play-book that successfully made the most of this economic effect. A secondary factor is that Microsoft has a well-run and well-staffed software development organization that has been able to continually respond to changing customer needs, by adding new features/releases and supporting its existing software.

Platform economics is a term I use to describe an economic effect seen in certain industries. A product enjoys platform economics when it has gravitational mass. As its gravitational mass grows, it attracts more matter to it, causing it grow even more. In a platform, this gravitational mass is conferred by the product enjoying 2 or more of the following economic effects:
  1. it enjoys a network effect, and
  2. it enjoys economies of scale in a positive feedback loop, and
  3. it guarantees an optimal solution to the "prisoner's dilemma" or "tragedy of the unregulated commons" for all persons using the product
The Microsoft Windows operating system enjoys this economic effect. In the era before interoperability technologies and standards were common, it was the case that as more people used Windows, each user benefited because he/she was able to exchange files with an ever larger community of people. The larger community also made it more cost-effective for software vendors to write software for the Windows operating system, increasing the number of applications available to Windows customers, further increasing the value of the operating system to its existing and potential customers.

The Windows operating system also provided software programmers and hardware manufacturers the promise of breaking the prisoner's dilemma. In the early days of desktop computing there was a proliferation of hardware devices and software programming platforms. Individual software vendors had to write their software to support the multitude of hardware devices out there. Software programs like WordPerfect 5.1 distinguished themselves by having the code to support a large number of printer hardware devices. Printer manufacturers like Epson distinguished themselves by canvassing as many software vendors as possible to support their printers. While this was an environment that worked for each party, it was far from optimal. (The system had settled into local optima instead of the global optima) Microsoft played the role of a global optima guarantor through the Windows operating system. It created a common device programming model, so that all software vendors only had to write to support the (one) Microsoft programming model, and all hardware vendors similarly only had to support the (one) Microsoft device driver model. All participants in this scheme stood to benefit, but only if everyone participated. A software vendor could support all possible hardware versions, and vice versa. Microsoft succeeded in delivering on this value, and Windows became the prisoner's dilemma global optima guarantor.

To a lesser extent, the Microsoft Office software also enjoyed platform economics. As a productivity software suite, it's users needed to exchange its files with other users (exchanging Word documents, Excel spreadsheets and so on). The more people who used Office, the larger the community of people its customers could exchange files with. The more people using it also made it more attractive for software developers to build productivity add-ons like macros and formulae in its Excel software and templates and fonts for its Word software.

Microsoft's playbook, which integrated its software products and allowed them to exchange information with each other, as well as its cultivation of the software developer community, fully exploited the platform economics characteristics of its products and created a wide moat. Customers who bought Microsoft products entered an ecosystem of benefits that only the Microsoft family of products could provide.

Supporting Microsoft's play-book was a solid software development team. There are 2 unique characteristics of software that make it different from analyzing other industries:
  1. Software is all about design. The source of competitive advantage is in having a business model that supports a team of developers who can keep updating software to keep pace with changes in the way customers work, or the way information is being processed. Constantly designing and redesigning software to meet changing usage patterns and needs is the key to sustaining a competitive advantage. There is no manufacturing economies of scale in software, because software is an information good with zero marginal cost of production.

  2. The way to get an edge in software development is to hire the best people. As primarily a design activity, hiring the best developers in the industry brings you much closer to having the best software development capabilities.
On both counts, Microsoft was firing on all cylinders throughout the 90s and early 2000s. The early PC era was like the Cambrian explosion, as people tried many different ways of processing information, use-cases, usage patterns and different types of software. Microsoft was able to build an organization that supported constant software adaptation to new and evolving usage patterns and needs. It was also seen as the most attractive place to work for bright software engineers, and it had a business model to fund its software development talent and organization. It built a market-to-lab feedback loop that allowed it to come up with continuous software design changes (upgrades and releases) to meet evolving customer needs.

Threats to Microsoft's moat

As computing evolves, we are now at a juncture which presents the following threats to Microsoft's moat and earnings stream:
  1. Software Cambrian explosion tapering off. The evolution of software use-cases and PC usage patterns are reaching a punctuated equilibrium. This is readily observable to both practitioners and customers. Think about how much Word Processing has changed for you in the last 2 years? Not likely to be much. For practitioners, how much has relational database or core operating system technology changed over the last 2 years? This relative stasis has the following effects:

    (a) It makes it possible for the bazaar model of software development to become practical. (See The Cathedral and the Bazaar). When software patterns stabilize, it is less of a necessity to have a paid team of developers constantly tinkering with the design to meet rapidly changing needs. Because software is all about design and has zero marginal cost of production, it allows startups and loose coalitions of developers to also develop competing software. The evidence for this is in the encroachment of open source software development in areas like operating systems, databases and web servers, where software evolution stasis is setting in. This is a threat to all software businesses, including Microsoft. It is especially threatening to Microsoft because operating systems and productivity software appear to be reaching punctuated equilibrium. What works in Microsoft's favor on the desktop side is that there is still some evolution in the types of hardware devices used and end-user programs, which keeps Linux and open-source competitors at bay. The bazaar model is more suited to point, less dynamic, software which changes less and has arrived at some emergent pattern. In comparison, the bazaar model likely to hit Office first, because it is more of a point solution and doesn't have to deal with as many integration and complexity variation points. The productivity suite space (Microsoft Office) is the canary in the coal mine to watch for the bazaar approach'es encroachment onto Microsoft's moat.

    (b) Punctuated equilibrium also allows open standards to come into existence. During periods of rapid software design evolution, it is difficult for open (interchange) standards to be maintained because too many parties need to sign-off on each change. But when categories of software reach evolutionary stasis, it becomes far more likely that open standards can be negotiated and maintained. Upstart competitors are likely to be strong advocates of standards, since it gives them the means to enter the market against Microsoft. Open (interchange) standards have the effect of breaking the closed ecosystem and platform economics of Microsoft software. With open standards, you no longer need to buy Microsoft software to exchange information with other people. The computing community as a whole enjoys the network effect as more users compute, instead of a world where network effect only exists within software platforms (Microsoft's or otherwise).

    (c) It reduces the value of software having development platforms for 3rd party software plug-ins, which is a core driver of platform economics. There is less value to Windows or Office providing an platform for 3rd parties to build applications on top of it. In the old world, more developers building more applications increased the value of the platform. But in a punctuated equilibrium, a single vendor can identify what is needed by the bulk of users and build it in an integrated stack/device. For example, Apple is doing that with its consumer devices - it has identified the core applications and use-cases for the bulk of users, and built it into one well executed device. This reduces the value of having a platform like Windows or Office.


  2. Interchange standards are becoming entrenched, fueled by the Internet and the Proliferation of non-PC devices. Interchange standards remove a key pillar of the platform economics that Microsoft has enjoyed to date. If the world were such that Microsoft software existed on all types of computing devices, then the defacto standard would be Microsoft's and Microsoft would still enjoy the benefits of platform economics. However, this isn't the case, and the probability of Microsoft reasserting itself across all computing devices is low. The proliferation of other non-windows devices accessing information (over the net) accelerates the adoption of standards and provides the environment and incentives for all players to work out mechanisms to share data and standardize formats. The cat has been let out of the bag, and there is no going back.

    Not that Microsoft didn't try. Bill Gates famously recognized the threat of the Internet very early on in 1995, as seen in his "Internet Tidal Wave" memo to employees. But even with this prescience, Microsoft failed to fend off the threat. It tried shaping the Internet conversation with IE, for example by only allowing IE to access hotmail, and getting website to use ActiveX controls which only PCs with Windows would be able to access. If they had succeeded, we could today be conceivably living in a world where all websites and browsers needed ActiveX technology and by proxy windows clients. With 20/20 hindsight Microsoft could have won the browser battle, but only if they had run it lean and mean. It could have won in this new ecology albeit with less of moat, because this ecology doesn't allow it. But it was playing by the play-book of the PC era ecology, which required complete domination. Its browser grew bloated, and mis-steps on standards (by trying to freeze other players/java/etc out too early ) and fundamentally failing to create a good user experience lost it the war. Firefox and Chrome took market share because they out executed and were leaner, and Internet standards are well entrenched today.

    Microsoft also failed to create compelling experiences on tablets, PDAs and Smart phones. It is likely it failed because it was playing by the PC playbook, and didn't recognize that a new user interface and usage model was at play. Apple and Google realized this when they looked at the market with a fresh pair of eyes. Apple and Google out competed by creating compelling user experiences that were suited to the new form factor.

    The proliferation of other devices and standards also presents a negative feedback loop for Microsoft. For example, as more people buy iPhones, they may decide to buy Apple computers to sync up with those phones. Because of the punctuated equilibrium and interchange standards, they may find they are able to do most of their work on the Apple computers. This would further reduce the moat Microsoft has around its Windows operating system.


  3. Technology evolution is shifting the battle has shifted to a new arena. As the industry evolves away the accidental difficulties in computing, Cloud Computing has become a viable architecture and software delivery model. Cloud Computing, more accurately defined as "presentation layer on the client, everything else running on a server somewhere else" has reduced the raison d'etre for the various features in PC operating systems like Windows.

    It also fundamentally changes the battlefield from the PC operating system and PC applications to the applications tier (which is increasingly residing on the server). It has changed the arena "playing field" where battles are fought from the PCs in our home and office to the servers and applications running on them. In a Cloud Architecture, the ecosystem is less important on the client side, especially if you only use cloud applications. However platform economics exist on the server application side. In this new arena, the battle is to get as many users onto your cloud application as possible, so that they can enjoy the interchange and platform economics amongst themselves. Microsoft will have to try to get the bulk of its users onto the web version of office, while trying to keep Google Apps at bay. Platform and Information economics work to benefit and build a moat around the dominant Cloud platform. So Microsoft's Azure and Office 365 cloud initiatives are critical plays for Microsoft.

    The paradigm shift from PC era computing to Cloud Architecture cannot be understated. It is akin to the point where people change from installing their own power generators to using centrally generated power. But we should not overstate the case either, it is unlikely that all software is suitable for a Cloud Architecture. But for users who only need applications which are Cloud-able, the value of the PC ecosystem to them is greatly diminished.

    This type of major technology disruption is what allows upstarts to destroy dominant firms. It exposes a new front for a competitor to come in, much like KMart's failure to serve second tier cities allow WalMart to build up its momentum and eventually displace it. As a new software architecture and delivery mechanism, it erodes the need to install software on PCs. It may allow new innovations like Google's Chrome based laptop to take share, and allow Force.com and Google Apps to take share.


Summary

It is likely that the ecological niche which sustains Microsoft will continue to exist for some time (a decade or more). It is probably an exaggeration to say that all software will shift to a Cloud Architecture, or that PCs will disappear from the face of the earth. It is also probably an exaggeration to say that Open Source software will destroy all commercial software companies. For many types of software, software will never fully stabilize into a punctuated equilibrium, because the software is built around how humans work in the real world. And that always changes. For example, in Enterprise Resource Planning and Accounting software will have to constantly evolve to meet changes in the business and regulatory environment.

On balance, a valuation of Microsoft relies on two things:
  1. your assessment of the qualitative issues discussed here, and how much they will (a) reduce the size of PC ecological space, and (b) reduce Microsoft's pricing power; and

  2. your assessment of Microsoft's prospects with its Cloud Computing efforts. That is the emerging threat and new ecology in which it appears to still be in a position to set the agenda.

By any measure, this is not an easy investment case to work out; there are many elements which require Venture Capital type thinking. Here are some other investors' thoughts on Microsoft as an investment:



Sunday, February 13, 2011

Western Union (WU) Investment Thesis / Stock Analysis


Western Union is one of the world's largest C2C cash-to-cash money transfer companies. While it also offers C2B, B2B and account-based and debit-card based transactions, the C2C cash-to-cash transfer business is still its largest line of business and its core.


Economics of the core business are excellent

Western Union has the world's largest network of agents signed up to its money transfer network. The growing base of agents creates a network effect for the agents, as it makes it possible for them to serve an ever increasing pool of consumers whose home towns (remittance destinations) are being added to the WU network. This network effect is likely to keep WU's agent network growing for sometime.

The economics of Western Union's business are also attractive. As primarily a data processing network, it is generally able to scale up its volume without scaling up its capital expenditures proportionally. Agents also typically have mainline businesses (retail stores, banking etc) which fund the overhead expenses of running the WU agency. The WU agency largely serves as a source of incremental revenue for them, and a means of maintaining foot traffic.

These factors create a business model whose economics are attractive: a network effect and low capital reinvestment needs. In so far as inflation increases wages, the amount of money handled through the Western Union network is also likely to increase in line with inflation. If Western Union is able to maintain its value to consumers relative to its competitors, this provides the means to keep its income growing in line with inflation.


Competitive Position

Money transfer is essentially a commodity business, and the competitor offering the lowest prices wins out eventually. As a business where economies of scale apply, Western Union is in the best position to offer the most competitive rates. Whether it chooses to do so is a question of how much profit vs market share it decides to go for. Western Union's structure, which is a single company clearing payments from one consumer to another, also gives it a structural cost advantage compared to arrangements where money is transferred from a company in a sending country to a company in a receiving country. To draw an analogy with the credit card industry, Western Union is to these competitors, as to what American Express is to Visa/Mastercard.

This economic and structural ability to achieve the lowest cost of operations allows WU the option of lowering prices to fend off competitors. Even a niche competitor focusing on a single transfer corridor (for example, Seattle to Manila, which is the only money transfer price and capability that a Filipino expatriate from Manila working in Seattle might be concerned with) is unlikely to be able to achieve a lower cost position, considering the distribution, data processing and back-room infrastructure that WU is able to amortize over a much larger global volume.

As a business that deals with a physical item (cash), distribution and reach are also a competitive differentiator. Like the retail business, it is essential to be accessible and located where the customer is. In this respect, Western Union's ever growing network of agents in everyday locations, operating on extended hours, is a strong competitive differentiator.

These 2 factors put Western Union in a very strong competitive position, which in turn improves the economics of the business as more agent come on board and greater economies of scale kick in. This positive feedback loop puts Western Union in a strong competitive position.


Sustainability of this ecological niche / prospects for growth

The real threat to Western Union is whether its core market will continue to exist and grow in the next decade or two. Western Union's core market and strength is in servicing migrant workers who deal in cash. This is the group of migrants who are not served by banks, which in most cases are persons with lower income levels (which is often related to lower literacy levels and a history of bad checks or credit) , or those without the documentation needed to open and maintain bank accounts.

The prospects for continued growth in migrants is good, with the global distribution of age groups being relatively unequal. Many countries today have aging populations, while others have too many young people looking for work. While political forces may stunt migrant flows from time to time, the long term economic reality makes it very likely that migrant flows will increase in the long term.

What is less certain is the continued existence of the un-banked, cash dealing migrant population (this is the same consumer group that is served by payday lenders and check cashiers). Political forces may call for post offices or community banks to offer low cost banking facilities to this niche. Competition may force banks to start targeting this niche of migrants with new service offerings. And innovations like low cost debit cards may offer this group a practical way of reducing the usage of cash.

Were this to occur, Western Union's growth prospects could be curtailed significantly. Western Union has a much weaker competitive position when it comes to processing funds transfers between electronic endpoints, such as bank-account to bank-account transfers, or debit/credit card to bank account transfers. A large agent network is far less important in handling transfers between electronic endpoints; agents are mainly useful when cash has to be paid-in or paid-out. Electronic transactions can be initiated with a phone call, over the Internet, or through some other electronic device.

In the realm of transfers between electronic endpoints, Western Union faces competition from PayPal, the SWIFT network between banks, and any number of payment processors handling Visa and Mastercard transactions. This ecological space is competitive, and some respected players see room for disruptive competition. Sequoia Capital has backed Xoom for processing electronic endpoint remittances. (ref: Xoom backed by Sequoia Capital). American Express has acquired RevolutionMoney, with its electronic C2C money transfer technology. Western Union's success in this space is far from certain. Many of these competitors may have a lower cost position, or have cross sell/cost-distribution opportunities that allow them to offer better price propositions. For example, a Filipino bank may be able to offer cheaper funds transfers between a migrant's offshore bank account and his/her family's bank account in the Philippines if both accounts are with the same bank.

Western Union has been trying to expand out of its core business to become a financial services provider. It has taken on the C2B business (payments) and B2B payments (its Custom House acquisition). It has also move into funds transfers between electronic endpoints with debit cards, and account-to-account remittances.

What Western Union has going for it in this new space is its brand recognition and distribution channel to introduce new products to its core customer base. However, this is unlikely to translate into a structural competitive advantage.



Summary

In short, the core determinant of Western Union's prospects and valuation is whether there will be continued growth in the cash-dealing (un-banked) migrant population. This relies on an assessment of:
(1) whether the low-income cash-dealing migrant population will continue growing, and
(2) whether competitors or legislation will move it to provide them with banking (electronic endpoints) facilities.

If one of these situations change, then Western Union's prospects may change significantly for the worse. Otherwise, if the ecological niches persist, then things can go wrong for WU only if:
(1) regulations restrict its business
(2) it fails to execute properly, and causes consumers to lose money or otherwise experience service lapses


Sunday, January 23, 2011

Betting on Interest rate movements


Interest rates are now at historical lows across the board (here) , driven largely by the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing initiative. Yields on all forms of debt have been pushed down as the Fed continues to add Treasuries and other Securities to its balance sheet. At some point this will reverse and yields will start to rise, though it is anyone's guess when this will happen.

Given the Fed's intent to keep printing money until the economy "recovers", this quantitative easing could go for some time. We might end up in a replay of the situation in Japan, where a sluggish economy and low interest rates (here, and here) have persisted over many years. Though I think it is unlikely the US will face such an extended downturn - Japan's difference is that it has a rapidly aging (and soon to be shrinking) population, and structural rigidities in its economy that make it difficult to reconfigure itself to work within its new demographic reality.

When yields starting heading upwards, the shift is likely to be swift and sustained. There are a few ways to bet on this trend when it happens:
  1. One way to profit from this movement when it happens, is to short bonds.

  2. Another way is to buy put options on ETFs that track bond prices. As the move is likely to take months to years to play out, buying LEAPs on the ETFs tracking longer dated bonds will give you a larger window in which to catch and ride the yield upswing.

    This approach is relatively accessible to retail investors; just remember to read the LEAP product specifications (for example, 1 LEAP contract may represent an interest in 100 shares of the underlying "stock") Here are a couple of ETFs that track Treasury Bond prices:

    - iShares Barclays 1-3 Year Treasury Bond (SHY)
    - iShares Barclays 3-7 Year Treasury Bond (IEI)
    - iShares Barclays 7-10 Year Treasury (IEF)
    - iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treas Bond (TLT)

  3. You can also buy put options on interest rates on the CBOE (CBOE) IRX, FVX, TNX, TYX


Sunday, December 26, 2010

Investment Outlook 2011

2010 in review

The US stock market spent the better part of 2010 in mildly overvalued territory. As of December 2010, the S&P is hovering around 1200, and the overall market capitalization is around USD 14.2 trillion. The market capitalization ratio is around 100%. As we've seen in our post in October 2008, the fair value of the US market is around 70-80% of GDP, which in todays terms corresponds to the S&P at 960. (A good place to get an update of the market valuation is here at GuruFocus: http://www.gurufocus.com/stock-market-valuations.php)

History also suggests that market values will correct towards fair value, often overshooting in the process. But there is no guarantee that the past will repeat itself, and we must be careful not to drive forwards while using only the rear view mirror to guide us. The nature of the market and investor participation prior to the 1960s is different in some fundamental ways from today's market. Nonetheless, my bet is that the market is still overwhelmingly driven by human mob psychology, and that is something that has not changed throughout human history.

Market mob psychology has historically demonstrated the ability to allow:
- the market to fall to 50% of GDP. This would imply the probable lowest the S&P may fall to is approx 600. That's a 50% drop from here.
- the market to rise to 150% of GDP; this occurred very briefly during the 1999 dot com mania, and was an unprecedented all-time valuation high for the market. This would imply the S&P at being 1800, which is a 50% rise from here.

Wildly overvalued markets are often challenging for value investors, because almost all stocks can be overpriced. Similarly undervalued markets present a feast for value investors as the majority of stocks drop to fire-sale prices. Mildly overvalued or undervalued markets would typically present fewer investing opportunities, as individual stocks and assets become cheap because of poor investor sentiment arising from events such as bad press and unexpected (transient) earnings surprises.

However the market in 2010 did not manifest many such opportunities, because it demonstrated an interesting characteristic: a very high level of correlation across all stocks. This has commonly been referred to as the "risk-on, risk-off" behavior of investors. All stocks move up and down in unison, and individual stock picking thus becomes a very challenging task as every stock pick becomes a bet on the overall market movement. There are fewer opportunities to practice investing, the art of buying undervalued stocks whose prices then go up as their value gets realized in the market. One of the few opportunities that came up were the few times when high quality blue chip companies were trading at fair value.


Looking forward : 2011

The economic environment is 2011 is likely to continue to be subdued as we continue working through the mis-allocation of resources during the bubbles between 2000 and 2008. The high levels of obligations to retirees and government employees (manifested as debt and unfunded obligations) will likely be a drag on the economy, as either (1) working people adjust to reduce their standard of living to make good on these promises made by the government to other sectors of society by transferring the results of their production to these other sectors, or (2) society adjusts to inflation which comes from monetizing the debt to break those promises made. The drag on the economy comes from the psychological effect on people who discover that their plans based on past promises or projections now have to be changed. As they feel poorer and/or find less rewards in production, they may reduce their level of economic activity (production and consumption).

But does the underlying economy really matter for investors? Stock prices will go up if everyone gets whipped up into a frenzy, whether or not the underlying economy is sound. How it matters is that the degree of activity in the underlying political economy can increase or decrease the probability that investor psychology will be triggered in one direction or the other.

What is 2011 likely to present to us: what are the known risks this coming year?
  1. The risk of people recognizing that massive central bank money printing will lead to inflation.

  2. The risk of people recognizing that private and sovereign debt will default explicitly or implicitly via inflation, either way leading to inflation or increasing yields; because of the large amounts of debt.

  3. The likelihood that economic growth continues to be slow, as we work through the continuing economic readjustment from the housing and financial asset bubble.
The underlying longer term trends, that we have observed earlier, continue to play out:
  1. reduction in availability of low cost resources (energy, commodities)

  2. demographic trends: aging in the vast majority of developed countries, and China

How investor and mass psychology plays out over the coming year is uncertain, though the triggers for a market correction seem to be there.



Investing Playbook

Given the underlying economic landscape, and what seems to be latent triggers for a change in investor psychology leading to a fall in equity prices, we look towards investing in companies which have strong business positions and growth ahead of them. Their downturn resistant earnings streams should support their stock prices to some degree, and even driving a growth in prices once correction-psychology stabilizes. The key is to buy at fair prices, as it is highly unlikely that companies seen as low-risk, durable and world-leading will sell for cheap prices for too long, irrespective of how much the market corrects. It is unlikely for example, that WMT would go for less than 10 times earnings for any prolonged period of time. A study of the bear market in the 1970s would suggest this belief.

Other more transient, or in-the-moment approaches are likely to be tricky this year. The recent erratic risk-on risk-off nature of market psychology makes it difficult to make money by playing transient shifts in changing asset preferences. It also makes it difficult to make the traditional value investing play of buying assets below their fair prices, in the hope of markets recognizing their true value.

The one shift in preference that seems a possibly good bet is the shift away from debt instruments. Rising recognition of sovereign default would likely trigger a shift away from bonds and resulting in rising yields. This has been expected for several years, and it is still anybody's guess whether this will happen this year. But when it does, it is likely the shift will be swift and decisive, providing an opportunity to place a bet on the continuance of this shift after it has started.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Consumer food companies: profitability, debt burden, revenue diversity

Here's a cheat sheet for the profitability, revenue diversity, and debt burden metrics for several of the world's leading consumer foods companies:

Blend of reported numbers and estimates for FY 2009 / 2010 (USD millions)


CPB HSY NSRGY KFT HNZ GIS K
Revenue 7,676 5,298 107,618 49,000 10,500 14,796 12,575
% from US 81% 86% ? 25% ? 44% 82% 68%
% from International 19% 14% ? 75% ? 66% 18% 32%
Operating Income, before interest expense (margin) 1,348 (17.56%) 761 (14.36%) 14,970 (13.91%) 5,814 (12.3%) 1,559 (14.8%) 2,861 (19.3%) 2,001 (15.9%)
% from US 89% ~90% ? 25% ? 53% 92% 86%
% from International 11% ~10% ? 75% ? 47% 8% 14%
Net Income (margin) 844 (10.99%) 436 (8.23%) 11,793 (10.96%) 2,376 (4.85%) 864 (8.2%) 1,535 (10.3%) 1,208 (9.61%)







Cash flow













Operating cash flow (before paying interest expense) 1,169 1,155 18,728 ? 1,557 2,581 1,938
Interest expense (as a % of revenue) 112 (1.46%) 90 (1.70%) 794 (0.74%) 2,126 (4.34%) 295 (2.81%) 400 (2.70%) 295 (2.35%)
Operating cash flow (after paying interest expense) 1,057 1,065 17,934 ? 1,262 2,181 1,643








Debt burden













Total debt (does not include liabilities such as accounts receivables, leases etc) 2,780 1,542 ~23,404 30,030 4,500 5,375 4,836
Debt to operating income ratio 2.06 2.02 1.56 5.17 2.88 1.87 2.41
Debt to operating cash flow (bef int) ratio 2.38 1.36 1.25 ? 2.89 2.08 2.50
Interest expense as % of operating income 8.3% 11.83% 5.3% 36.57% 18.92% 13.98% 14.74%
Estimated interest rate incurred on debt (guesstimate; does not consider different debt maturities) 4.03% 5.83% 3.39% 7.08% 6.56% 7.44% 6.10%