General comments on the market

I have not written too much lately, but the short-term research focus continues on stocks that are generally trading at 52 week lows. If you are into gold mining companies, let me tell you, there is no shortage of research to be conducted.

Fortunately, I do not focus on the gold mining industry and can let other intelligent people harvest opportunities in that category. One would think, however, that large-scale entities like Barrick (TSX: ABX) and Kinross (TSX: K) would have some sort of value, given that they are trading at lows they haven’t seen in a decade. That said, just because a large corporation has traded at a certain level in the past doesn’t mean they will continue trading at that value forever – the market is full of survivor bias, which is why you don’t see Polaroid or Kodak trading anymore.

There is another focus which I have been slowly shifting my attention to, and this is territory that is generally unexplored for me: international stocks, beyond those in English-speaking jurisdictions. My natural investment aversion to non-English speaking jurisdictions is colliding against the general belief that there seemingly are entities trading out there that are at relatively cheap valuations. I can easily see right now, however, that I am the person around the poker table that everybody wants to take a dollar out of, so I am very wary treading into this direction.

I did find a particular investment candidate in the early part of the quarter which I pounced on with two feet and this unexpectedly has boosted the performance of the portfolio considerably and I hope to find others. I might write a report on this one after year-end.

Timing Blackberry

Blackberry is going to be an interesting business case as they are clearly not going down without a fight.

They are going to report quarterly results on December 20, 2013. I would expect these results to be very sub-optimal simply because if there was some signs of revenue stabilization it is much more likely that they would have found partners in the proposed buyout at US$9/share. Since there were multiple parties out there that were looking at the internals of Blackberry during October and would have received full visibility in two of three months of the fiscal cycle, I very much believe that revenues will be well below the $1.58 billion consensus estimate that I see on Yahoo at the moment.

In addition, with the new CEO cleaning house at the upper management level, it is going to take at least three to six months for them to realign the company and apply resources to the appropriate strategic priorities the company needs to focus on to get back to a profitable setting. However, the fact that he is cleaning house is a positive signal even though you will not be seeing the results of such actions for at least half a year.

That said, with the expectations in the stock market, I would expect rock bottom to be hit at the end of the year. Not only will they likely produce a lower-than-low expectations quarter, but you will also have the avalanche of tax loss selling and portfolio window dressing – which portfolio manager out there except for Prem Watsa would want to see this dog in their portfolio at year-end?

The sentiment regarding this upcoming quarter is quite bad. The question is how much the market has already baked in an upcoming bad quarter. Have they over-discounted?

DISCLOSURE: A friend of mine who I consider to be quite tech savvy, who already owns a Samsung smartphone with one of those giant screens, recently bought a Blackberry Q10. He suffers from a “can’t type on a touchscreen if it could save my life” syndrome. I share the same syndrome and am actually in the market looking for a usable phone with an actual physical keyboard. Other than that, no positions.

When will Bitcoins peak?

Bitcoins are once again making headlines, for exceeding US$1,000 per Bitcoin on various exchanges.

I wrote about them back in 2011 when they were trading at around US$20 a piece. The analysis is really still the same.

The debate here should not be whether Bitcoins are useful as a currency or not, but the lesson here is strictly one in economics – people see value in very strange things, and when people do see value, there will be markets created. In this case, the product is a currency that is only valuable because of its rarity and difficulty of generation, and is not too different than trading artwork or collectibles which have similar appeal.

More people are seeing something valuable in something very odd and this is apparently spreading world-wide to anybody with a computer.

As for answering the question as to what Bitcoin’s peak is, I do not know for sure. This reminds me of when I asked myself when the dot-com bubble is going to burst, or how far the US stock market was going to plunge in late 2008/early 2009.

There are a few headwinds I see for Bitcoin, and they generally deal with hitting the law of large numbers.

The first deals with liquidity.

There are 12 million Bitcoins outstanding, but the reported liquidity is quite thin. Right now if you wanted to liquidate 5,000 Bitcoins and raise a cool $5 million, according to the liquidity chart you would move things about 13% if you wanted to hit the bid with everything you have. Obviously you would want to fragment the order and leak it out over a period of time over multiple exchanges, but I would suspect that there are some component of technical traders that are simply out there to scalp dollars and not actually give a hoot about the currency.

The reported market cap of Bitcoin is about $11 to 12 billion and when looking at a typical equity trading with the equivalent capitalization, Bitcoin’s liquidity is nowhere close.  How many dollars can you actually extract out of the market if you had 100,000 Bitcoins and wanted to liquidate in a timely manner?

Another issue deals with the ability to control the blockchain (the accounting equivalent of the general ledger, with the notable exception that the blockchain contains ALL information of transactions since the history of Bitcoin).  Without getting into a lot of technical details, there are collusion opportunities to corrupt the blockchain if you control a majority of Bitcoin miners.  Bitcoin mining has become a very specialized art and to effectively compete in mining, you need to own arrays of specialized devices for the purposes of mining Bitcoins.  Since the difficulty of Bitcoin mining increases as a function of both time and the amount of computational power on the Bitcoin network, there has been a technological arms race, with the following result:

Please observe the y-axis is logarithmic – mining Bitcoins has been over a hundred times more difficult than it was at the start of the year.  This is like your typical 10MBps residential high-speed internet connection scaling down to twice the speed of a dial-up modem.

The technology to do the proper calculations are application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) that have their sole purpose in life to mine Bitcoins, but as these are permeating the Bitcoin marketplace, there are limited opportunities for exponential improvement to Bitcoin hash rates through technological innovation – most performance improvement from this point is going to be linear as more machines get added to the cluster networks that are solely dedicated to Bitcoin mining.

I note with amusement the announcement that somebody is producing a 20nm process ASIC rig that can do some insanely high hash rate, but this will be the end of the line: 20nm semiconductor processing is the peak of the current technology limit – even Intel is still working on perfecting the 14nm process.  Even then, the company has already announced the product (which apparently will be shipped in Q2-2014) will be at the threshold of the limits that a typical household power supply can handle.

So when you get into industrial-level operations to run arrays of computer hardware solely for the purpose of mining Bitcoins, some group is going to consolidate a majority of miners and be able to corrupt the network.  With billions of dollars of market capitalization, it is getting to the point where that group is probably thinking about implementing some scheme to control the blockchain.

The blockchain concept also creates a scaling issue as eventually it becomes impractical for it to be maintained by distributed “retail” computers – “institutional” resources are increasingly employed to maintain the blockchain as they will be the only ones to have sufficient computational muscle to be relevant.

When will this blow up?  I’m not sure, but I’m reasonably sure we’re within an order of magnitude (i.e. not higher than US$10,000/Bitcoin) just because of the law of large numbers – liquidity (the quantity of dollars Bitcoin is able to extract from others) and blockchain dynamics.

The current phase in Bitcoin is still adding people with money into the system, which is required for the scheme to continue, but those that have caught onto the scheme earlier will presumably be continuing to diversify their Bitcoin holdings into harder currency.

When reading Reddit’s Bitcoin chatter, I see a lot of financial illiteracy out there, which doesn’t bode well for those that have high hopes for Bitcoin.

I do not own any Bitcoins, nor will I, but I am watching this with curiosity.  It is indeed is fascinating to watch non-financial people get involved in what is inherently a financial specialty product with a touch of well-designed technology sprinkled in.  Whoever conceived of this did their homework and never would have guessed the technology arms race that has developed as a result.

Pinetree Capital – Possibly the worst closed-end fund, ever

This article is about Pinetree Capital (TSX: PNP), which came across my radar a few months ago when doing some casual screens of the market.  I’ve analyzed this one many, many years ago and dismissed the idea for obvious reasons.  Nothing much has changed since then other than that management has blown about half a billion dollars – this is an accomplishment that very few non-fraud artists can claim.  The firm itself is quite easy to analyze.

The company functionally operates as a closed-end fund that invests in extremely risky microcap ventures in the mining sector. They were lucky enough to catch the uranium boom half a decade ago, but judging by their subsequent performance it was likely due to luck more than anything else. Their existing investment portfolio is full of unrealized losses in failed ventures:

 

With a whopping 378 investments, this company is a functional proxy for the TSX Venture exchange index.  And as investors might know, the Venture exchange has taken a serious beating over the past year, especially as most gold ventures have cratered (the TSX Venture is down 24% year to date, while you can see Pinetree capital’s portfolio is down about 45% in a year where there is a raging bull market in practically everything else than what Pinetree is invested in).

It is kind of amazing to see the $494 million unrealized loss row on the financial statements as this type of prowess in investment picking should be carefully harvested in a hedge fund designed to mirror 180 degrees exactly whatever the Pinetree investment committee chooses to engage in.  Investors would have made a fortune.

On the balance sheet side, the asset portfolio is primarily capitalized with $388 million equity from generous investors and the usage of convertible debentures (TSX: PNP.DB) of which $61 million is currently outstanding.  Strictly in terms of assets and liabilities, the debentures are the only major liabilities on the book and they are currently the only debt on the books (aside from some broker margin loans that arise from time to time):

 

There are a couple comments I will make on asset quality (or lack thereof):

1) Fortunately, most of them ($124 million) are level 1 assets, which means that there is some external methodology (market quotations) that can be attributable to how management values them.  The level  2 and 3 assets I would mentally write off.  Even the level 1 assets will likely have questionable amounts of liquidity (given that the history of the corporation is to purchase minority stakes in various junk firms) and should be mentally discounted for this reason.

 

2) The company is likely to exclude the $23 million in deferred tax assets when they release their year-end audited report as it will be a very, very long time before they’ll be able to use it all.  In fact, one of the likely liquidation scenarios for the entire firm is to sell the whole thing to somebody that knows what they are doing, and will recapitalize the firm and utilize all the capital losses the company will be booking – indeed, if you journal the half billion in losses, the company does have about $65-70 million in a reasonable capital tax shield to a potential acquirer.

This tax asset does have hidden value, but you have to get by the fact that management has a heavy severance penalty.

So when doing some mental adjustments on these assets (eliminating the deferred tax asset, eliminate level 2 and level 3 assets, and taking a 20% haircut off the level 1 assets) you have about $100 million, offset by about $61 million in convertible debentures.  The residual $39 million is reasonably close to the current market cap of the company ($42 million at present).

Management is entrenched in the company and they make a pretty profit from simply being there.  I will let this chart speak for itself:

 

Suffice to say, pulling a cool million a year out of this train wreck is rivaling what Robert Mugabe has done to Zaire Zimbabwe over the past few decades.

So what is the thesis on this train wreck? The answer is in the debentures.  They are trading at around 2/3rds of par value for obvious reasons – they mature in May 2016 and investors are wondering whether the level 1 assets are going to have any hope of recovery or not.  That said, there was a covenant in the debentures that required the company’s liability to asset ratio to not be greater than 33%, which they breached earlier this year (mainly due to losses on their investment portfolio).  They had to arrange a special meeting to obtain a partial cure (where the liability to asset ratio would be 50%) for 9 months, and endeavour to buy back some debentures and raise a little more equity capital on a best efforts basis.  They were able to obtain this by giving out a 6% sweetener and increasing the coupon from 8% to 10%, effective at the end of this month.

If the company didn’t broker this deal, debenture holders could have foreclosed on the entire firm and then there would be a firesale to make the debtholders whole.  Indeed, the salaries of top management could be used to pay for bankruptcy trustees.

In addition, the following terms and conditions were agreed upon:

 

 

It is clear that there is some large holder out there of the debenture that is dictating terms to the company.  Notwithstanding the external pressures being applied by the major debenture holder, management still has firm control of the company and it is clear that nobody rational would ever want to own the common shares of the business.

Management has a clear incentive to seeing that this train wreck continues as long as possible – it is a million dollar per year vehicle to extract capital out of unwitting investors and this incentive should make it possible for them to get rid of the pesky debenture holders by just selling enough assets and getting rid of them.

Of course, the scenario of destruction is that management will continue to bleed away their asset base.  At the rate they have been going, they will hit zero at 2014.  I think the value of the gravy train is more of a powerful force for management than trying to screw over debtholders, however.

The debentures can be redeemed at maturity for shares of common stock at 95% of the market value at a pre-defined time before maturity.  This is the ultimate nuclear button for management, but it would virtually ensure they would lose control of the firm at this point.

There is the additional catalyst of the 9 month deadline for the company to once again be compliant with the 33% liability-to-asset ceiling.  This is June 12, 2014.  By then, the company should have bought back $20 million in debentures and raised $5 million in equity.

The risk/reward dynamic here is obvious – if the Venture index does not plummet any further, debtholders should come out whole and also receive some very healthy-sized coupon payments along the way as compensation for holding onto the train wreck.  The risk is the aforementioned market risk with the index-like exposure the company has to the penny stock market.

Anyhow, I took a position in this early July before some other insightful writer identified this opportunity and it became public on Seeking Alpha.  It received a temporary boost-up in value then, but it has recently sunk to values that made me want to write about this in case if somebody wanted to hold their nose and purchase some of this stinker – the debentures, not the equity.

The results after many hours of research – not much

Doing investment research these days (when the S&P 500 has reached all-time highs) feels like mining Bitcoins – a very high-energy consuming process with a very high probability you will get zero return on investment.

I was afforded the luxury of having some dedicated time off and did about six hours of research, most of which was on the US equity side. Initially, I did some preliminary screening of the Canadian side for potential value stocks, but mostly turned up ones relating to gold mining, which I very rarely dabble in just because I do not have strong thoughts about the metal other than it looks pretty when holding it. I decided to focus on the US equity market instead and broadened my screen to avoid stocks that were explicitly trading at their relative lows.

The net result of this was I did some fairly heavy research on two companies of which were closer to their 52-week highs than their lows (which is always a turn-off, but it is nearly impossible to find anything that is trading at their lows these days which were worthy of further research). One of these companies was a retailer, the other was a company selling customized consumer products which appeared to be on the cusp of becoming a universally known name. I will focus on the first one.

Retailers, especially those that cater toward women’s fashions (e.g. Coach (NYSE: COH), please note this was not the retailer, but I am consistently fascinated how they can produce the financial results they do) are very difficult to analyze from an equity perspective. I can read the financial statements and tell you how much money they are making and how they are making it, but predicting how much mind-share they will have in the consumer market (and in Coach’s case, the mind share they have with women, which I am not one of) is a very critical and intangible asset to measure.

I will keep these companies on my watchlist and just be patient. The cash value in the portfolio continues to be quite high and it is earning a whopping zero percent yield, but the easy way to lose money is to throw it at something for the sake of having it invested.

The end of November is as good a time as any to look for candidates that are ripe for tax loss selling, but they are consisting of companies that are related to precious metals, biotechs with particular clinical trial blow-ups and obscure semiconductor companies with genuine issues that caused them to plummet in the first place. I haven’t been able to find too much.