-
Font Size:
These are notes from the Day 1 sessions at the 3rd Annual Value Investing Congress West, being held May 6-7, written by Jonathan M. Heller.
The 3rd annual Value Investing Congress West kicked off Tuesday with an introduction from co-founder John L. Schwartz, MD. Each presenter discussed their investment philosophy, addressed current market issues, and then highlighted specific investment ideas.
First up were Mark Sellers and Victor Fasciani from Sellers Capital LLC, whose Sellers Capital Fund has booked an impressive 36% annualized (net of fess) since inception. Seller’s runs a highly concentrated portfolio of companies with what they believe to be “wide moats”.
Sellers and Fasciani presented the case for Vulcan Materials (VMC):
• Demand for aggregate materials (asphalt related) will grow as US
infrastructure (bridges, roads, etc) are in need of repair.
• The aggregate industry suffers from the “Not in my back yard”
syndrome, so new mines are not being opened quickly enough. Plus, it
takes five years, an onerous amount of permits, and $100 million to
open a new mine.
• With growing demand for aggregate material, and desperate needs for
infrastructure improvements in the US, Vulcan is well positioned to be
a beneficiary.
• Sellers and Fasciani believe the stock is worth at least $90.
Next up was Jeff Bronchick from Reed Conner & Birdwell, LLC. Bronchick seems never afraid to speak his mind, which makes him a very entertaining speaker. Among other things, Bronchick brought forth the notion that value investing is far from an exact science, and while it is successful over time, it does not work in every time period. On the subject of the credit crisis, Bronchick suggested that the situation may not be as dire as it appears, and took aim at industry execs that still have their jobs despite terrible mismanagement.
Bronchick’s main focus was AIG (AIG):
• Company is unfairly tarnished, and has been punished by headline risk
• Has never been cheaper at 8 times “depressed” earnings
• Has $13 billion in excess capital
• Potential write-offs are very small given the company’s large asset base
• Company has plenty of staying power
Bronchick also addressed General Electric (GE), suggesting that management needs to, among other things, drop quarterly guidance, stop selling businesses at book value, then paying dearly for other businesses, and buy back stock and/ or increase the dividend.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Railway Stocks Haul Transportation ETF to Solid Returns
- Protect Your Portfolio: Here Comes the Squeeze
- The Most Important Price in an Economy
- Income Planning and Safe Withdrawal Rates
- Solvency and Liquidity: Non-Identical Twins
- The Great Inflation Debate
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- The Disconnect Between Supply and Demand in Gold & Silver Markets »
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback »
- The Great Consumer Crash of 2009 »
- Cramer Continues to Dig a Sirius Hole for Himself »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- With Help from California, Solar Gets Fired Up »
- Petrobras: Buy and Sit Tight Like Soros »
- Forget $100 a Barrel - Oil Will Plummet to $30 »
- Don't Cancel Motorola's Funeral Just Yet »
- Time to Pull the Trigger on Four Oil Service Stocks »
- Interview with Jim Rogers, Part I: Bigger Financial Shocks Loom »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Why I'm Buying Amylin Now
- HP: Good To Grow
- Screener Picks: Three Mega-cap Long Picks
- Financial Downgrades Down Markets - Fast Money Recap (8/19/08)
- Transocean: Drilling Deep for Profits
- Whose Freddie Investment Thesis Is Right?
- Steel Dynamics: Bullish with a Share Repurchase Program
- E-Trade Financial Carries High Risk-Reward
- Interested in Bank of America? Consider the Preferred Shares
- Northgate: Mid-Tier Gold Producer with Strong Cashflow
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Salesforce.com: It's All About the Guidance
- Three Casino Stocks Rolling Over
- New Web Site For Short Sellers: You Gotta Love Capitalism
- Commodity Carnage: Where to Turn Next?
- Fannie and Freddie Shareholders Run for the Exit
- Goldman: Readying Short Position Initiation Sequence
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback
- Russia's Too Risky - Barron's
- Fannie, Freddie Shareholders Will Be Left Holding the Bag - Barron's
- Pilgrim's Pride: The Weakest Link in the Food Chain
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Real Buys - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/20/08)
- Coke vs. Pepsi - Cramer's Mad Money (8/19/08)
- Clean Energy - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/19/08)
- Still Growing - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/19/08)
- Which Stock to Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Buy Weyerhauser - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/18/08)
- The Price of Oil - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Great Execution Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/14/08)
- Beaten Down Buy - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/14/08)
- The Fry Guy - Cramer's Midday Mad Money (8/14/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 2 comments:
"• Company is unfairly tarnished, and has been punished by headline risk
• Has never been cheaper at 8 times “depressed” earnings
• Has $13 billion in excess capital
• Potential write-offs are very small given the company’s large asset base
• Company has plenty of staying power"
AND YESTERDAY's headline: "AIG posts 1Q loss of $7.8B, plans to raise $12.5B"
beware of value traps. I like good insurers but aig has a terrible track record , their integrity is one of worst in industry and I simply do not trust their prudence. I will alway prefer a markel or a berkshire hataway to them.