Pages

Monday, January 20

How OM Thinks about Sizing Shipping

Given the recent and likely ongoing volatility, OM wanted to talk about how plans on managing his Shipping positions.  As such, this post is primarily a way to help OM clarify his own thoughts and commit them to paper.    

An advantage of being in the investment world over the last 20-years is that OM has seen many otherwise intelligent and rational folks make appalling investment decisions. Typically, these decisions come at times of stress and often around the investor’s high conviction positions! These experiences mean that OM his keenly aware that it is as important to protect your mental capital as it is your financial capital when investing.

This is particularly the case for OM’s position in Shipping. It will be very volatile; the underlying supply/demand dynamics mean shipping rates will fluctuate significantly, the operating and financial leverage of the stocks will add to this and the terrible history of the sector means the marginal investor will initially focus too heavily on short-term data points.   For Our Man’s portfolio, this is magnified further due to the size of the position – it is indubitably the highest risk position in the portfolio. That is not an oversight. 

So how to deal with this volatility and the uncertainty it will naturally engender? 
First of all accept it is coming and be comfortable with the consequences of that.  Shipping will likely dominate the moves of OM’s portfolio over the coming weeks, months and quarters.  It will happen regularly and so OM will not be writing up every 20-30% move up or down in the stocks, or adjusting the portfolio for them.

Second, remember why you’re invested.  For Our Man, it’s a high conviction Dislocation position that is fully sized and ‘on the clock’ now that the catalyst (IMO 2020) to engender investor interest has occurred. The goal for Dislocation positions is that they return multiples of invested capital within a relatively defined time period. To capture the compounding required to generate this performance, OM treats them more like private-equity positions. This means, the positions aren’t really resized or traded unless (i) the long-term thesis changes or (ii) the capital at risk in the position goes beyond OM’s preset tolerance.  

Currently, OM’s view is that “too much” capital at risk would be 25-30% NAV in Shipping and 10% in any of individual names. However, if OM’s thesis is correct then these max capital at risk levels will slowly decline.  So while Shipping is currently OM’s highest risk position, he’s comfortable with the potential mark-to-market losses and expecting to be paid for that risk.

The difficulty of dislocation positions is that even after the ‘catalyst’ they require patience and will-power. This will particularly be the case in Shipping, and Bob Farrell’s Rule Number Four (10 Market Rules to Live By) sums up what to expect.

“Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you think, but they do not correct by going sideways” -- Bob Farrell

Third, have a plan!  A plan is a starting point, and it should change over time as circumstances and data change. Here are the key elements to OM’s plan.  OM is primarily focusing on the fundamentals - relevant crude/product tanker shipping day rates and how they show up in company earnings. He is most interested in the general level of rates and how they compare to prior years, and less so with the short term moves.  The short-term changes will likely be substantial and inconsistent, and overly focusing on them is how you destroy mental capital through obsessing about the trees but missing the forest.  Remember, for Dislocation investments the time horizon for the thesis is 18-24mos (max 30mos), in this case from Jan 2020, so the longer-term levels and their trends matters more. Secondly, Shipping is a very seasonal sector and so comparison to prior years is more important than vs. recent months. Obviously, strong day rates should lead to strong corporate earnings (and potentially dividends), which will help attract other investors.

Meanwhile, understand it is shipping and the crappy history that created the opportunity means that new(er) investors will be skeptical. It will take day rates being meaningfully and consistently higher than previous years, and the companies showing they’re not spending their free cash flow on more ships for the investor community to start to get very interested. Until then, every downturn in rates will lead to “it’s the end of the cycle” comments.  This is another factor that will only exacerbate the volatility in both directions.

Fundamentals will also be the simplest and most important way for OM to be proven wrong.  So expect him to exit if (i) the recent rise in shipping rates is brief and cyclical and then they consistently look like 2018/2019’s rates, or (ii) better rates don’t flow through to company earnings and free cash flow, or (iii) companies repeat the folly of past cycles and order new ships!

What could make OM sell if he’s right?
If OM is correct in his thesis then there are two ‘rules’ – on position size and holding period – for Dislocation positions in addition to any qualitative rationale, for reducing/exiting positions.   As mentioned about these rules are of a typical holding period of 18-24 months (and 30 months maximum) from the narrative changing event (IMO 2020 on Jan 1st, 2020), and OM has set the maximum position size he’s comfortable with at 25-30% today (and 10% per individual position) though both will decline as the thesis progresses.

Assuming the fundamentals continue to trend well, then the qualitative decision is based around price, valuation and sentiment.  The extreme limits of these are easy to specify; expect OM to be well out of these names when you start seeing the companies trading at multiples of NAV, or read/hear about shipping companies as “high dividend names” or that shipping day rates will stay at elevated levels for years (i.e. the sector is no longer cyclical). Finally, Our Man is also watching to see when the names are added to different ETFs. While the stocks will certainly benefit from the wall of passive money flowing into them it’s a strong signal that the end is near for Shipping as a dislocation position in OM’s portfolio*.

Conclusion
Our Man hopes that the three points above – accepting that Shipping will be volatile (and will drive the portfolio’s short-term moves), remembering why he’s invested, and having a plan – will help him manage the shipping positions over the coming quarters.  He’s also listed some of the fundamental and other qualitative factors he’s watching to try and help prevent thesis creep, so expect updates on these during the quarterly reviews.   Finally, if you ever hear OM talking about how Shipping cos are high dividend names…then less than politely ask him what the hell he’s doing and remind him of this post!!




* For future reference, today the stocks are barely owned by ETFs – STNG (3.3% of market cap is held by ETFs), DSSI (2.5%) and EURN (2.1%).  For comparison, large bell weather stocks (AAPL, GOOGL, FB, BA, GE, etc.) have ~10% of their market cap owned by ETFs and some stocks can have 40%+ of their market cap owned by passive investors.


Disclaimer:  Nothing above represents a recommendation in any way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take it that way.  For added clarity, while Our Man is invested in STNG, DSSSI and EURN that’s a terrible reason for anyone else to invest in them.  You should not buy any of these securities because Our Man has mentioned them, but should do your own work and decide what’s best for you given your own circumstances/risk tolerance/etc. 

Saturday, January 18

2019: Fourth Quarter Update

Portfolio Update
- Added to Enterprise SaaS (Thematic: 4th Industrial Revolution):  Over the summer, Our Man lamented the lack of a good ETF that tracks Enterprise SaaS companies.  Well, late Q3 saw the launch of Wisdom Tree’s Cloud Computing ETF (WCLD) which uses the BVP Nasdaq Emerging Cloud Index, OM’s favorite Enterprise SaaS index, as its reference index.   Following a sharp pull back in these names in September, Our Man needed little encouragement to take a position.  The ETF is still very small (<$20mn) but in time expect it to represent the vast majority of the Enterprise SaaS theme.

- Added ARTTX (Funds):  Artisan Thematic Fund (ARTTX) is a thematically driven discretionary mutual fund with a focused portfolio.  OM has known the manager a while, thinks highly of him and currently the portfolio largely overlaps with the 4th Industrial revolution theme.  


Performance and Review
The final quarter saw the portfolio rise +13.3%, which finally outperformed both the S&P 500 Total Return (+9.1%) and the MSCI World (Total Return, Net Dividends; +8.6%).   This meant that portfolio ended the year at +28.3%, which is nestled between the S&P 500 Total Return (+31.5%) and the MSCI World (Total Return, Net Dividends) (+27.4%).



Fourth Quarter Attribution

Dislocation
Shipping drove the portfolio’s performance in the fourth quarter (+570bps), and was the second largest contributor in 2019 (~800bps). The Crude and Product Tanker positions (STNG, DSSI and EURN) represent almost all over the exposure, and were up over 30% during the quarter. The rise reflected very strong shipping day rates and increased media and investor attention as IMO 2020 approached. These rates were further helped by President Trump’s decision to sanction some Chinese firms, including affiliates of COSCO, for their role in transporting Iranian crude oil. The sanctions effectively blacklisted these firms’ ships reducing supply in an already tight market, and further helping drive rates higher.

Greece (+230bps) performed well during the quarter, rising as the Mitsotakis government continues to make positive steps on economic reforms and negotiations with Europe as well as engender goodwill.  Greece was the largest contributor to the portfolio in 2019, adding over 900bps.

Uranium (-15bps) continues to be a disappointment and cost ~120bps for the year.  While there continue to be positive fundamental signs in terms of supply/demand, and pricing being off its lows, there is little that has changed investor sentiment.  Investors have shown little response to the largest players cutting capacity and the IPO of Kazatomprom and OM is loath to increase the position size until there’s concrete evidence of long-term contracts at higher prices.

Thematic
The 4th Industrial Revolution theme (+120bps in Q4) was the most successful thematic position of the quarter and of 2019 (adding ~300bps).  The SaaS exposure generated ~57bps, rebounding in October and November from the weak performance over the summer before giving up some of the gains in December.  Public Cloud/SaaS companies ended the year at ~9.6x EV/Implied Revenue, which is at the high-end of their historical range, and saw reasonable multiple expansion over where they closed 2018.  The valuation, though well down on the highs of recent years (11.6x in August 2018) and the 10x+ multiples seen in the first half of 2019, would have to be much lower for OM to consider increasing the position.  The other position in the 4th Industrial Revolution basket is JD.com, which had a strong quarter with the company planning on listing its logistics business.

The positions in Brazil (+70bps for Q4, +150bps for the year) and India (+25bps in Q4, flat for the year) were both contributors.  The signs remain broadly positive on both fronts and given the long-term theses, OM wouldn’t be surprised to see them still in the portfolio in a few years’ time.

There were two negative contributors amongst the Thematic positions.  Vietnam (-10bps in Q4, though approx. +50bps in 2019) continued to drift as it has since Q1.  The VN Index generally headed in the same direction as the S&P 500 for most of the year, but this changed after the Fed’s October rate cuts when then VN Index pulled back.   Generally, there’s little changed with the long-term thesis with economic growth remaining strong (GDP of 7%) and 2019 seeing a substantially tightening in government bond yields.  However, there were some short-term cracks in Vietnam’s economic story that likely contributed to the fourth quarter weakness. The PMI fell below 50 and inflation rose above 5% (mainly due to pork prices), both for the first time in a number of years, and foreign investors were net sellers of shares for most of the second half of the year.  Finally, OM exited the remaining tiny piece of the Argentina (-2bps) exposure, which has been discussed previously.

Idiosyncratic & Technical
The Funds (+75bps in the quarter, +200bps for the year) performed solidly throughout the year, though their more global nature meant they lagged the S&P 500.  Texas Pacific Land Trust (TPL, +65bps in Q4, and +165bps in 2019) continued to perform well.  After settling with activist shareholders during 2019, the company’s Conversion Exploration Committee is working on ways to convert or reorganize the Trust into a corporation.

The Technical book (+201bps), with its exposure to leveraged equity indices, continued to contribute healthily as markets rose taking its contributions to ~400bps for the year. 

Portfolio (as at 12/31/19 - all delta and leverage adjusted, as appropriate)

Dislocations: 46.9%
23.1% - Greece (GREK, ALBKY, and EGFEY)
18.3% - Shipping (STNG, DSSI, EURN and NVGS)
5.5% - Uranium (URA, CCJ and NXE)

Thematic: 25.1%
8.6% - Tech: 4th Industrial Revolution (JD, IGV & WCLD)
5.7% - Vietnam (VNM)
5.5% - India (INDA and SCIF)
5.0% - Brazil (EWZ)
0.0% - Blockchain (no positions)

Technical: 22.6%
22.6% - OEW Technical positions (DDM, SSO, and QLD)

Idiosyncratic: 15.6%
12.3% - Funds (ARTTX, CWS, GVAL, and CAPE)
3.3% - Equities (TPL)

Shorts/Hedges: 0.0%

Cash: 1.1%




Disclaimer:  Nothing above represents a recommendation in any way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take it that way.  For added clarity, while Our Man is invested in all of the securities mentioned that’s a terrible reason for anyone else to do so.  Our Man also holds some cash and a few other securities (of negligible value).  You should not buy any of these securities because Our Man has mentioned them, but should do your own work and decide what’s best for you given your own circumstances/risk tolerance/etc.