There were a number of
changes to the portfolio during the quarter.
A brief summary is below, but expect a broader portfolio review (likely
in multiple parts) in the coming weeks.
International:
- Added to Brazil (EWZ & EWZS): As readers
will remember, Brazil fell heavily in mid-Q2 after recorded conversations (re.
accepting a bribe) involving President Temer led to an impeachment attempt and
potential criminal charges. In
mid-to-late-July, it became clear that these charges wouldn’t be accepted by
the lower house of Congress (subsequently confirmed by a vote in August)
and in late August the Brazilian market broke out to new highs. OM added to the Brazil position on each of
these events (in larger size on the breakout to new highs). This makes Brazil the
largest position in the portfolio.
- Bought India (INDA & SCIF): OM started a
small position in India. He’s been
looking at it for a while, as it’s somewhere that’s likely a multi-year holding but was always too price sensitive. Call this a first nibble at what might
one-day be a much larger position.
- Bought Greece (GREK & ALBKY): OM’s previous investments in
Greece have been far from stellar (i.e. terrible) yet he returned to that
poisoned chalice just before quarter-end.
Why now? Time (and
recapitalizations) help heal balance sheet wounds, and there was a small
(under-reported) catalyst on debt reduction.
The initial position is very small - it would have to triple to cover
prior losses - but the return potential is substantial and OM thinks the market is over-stating the risk.
- Exited Italy (EWI): OM exited the
Italy position. It has performed well,
but other opportunities (i.e. Greece) are just more attractive at this
point.
Equity:
- Exited Dollar Tree (DLTR): While
Dollar Tree is a beneficiary of tax reform (if it comes), with Amazon’s purchase of
Whole Foods and stronger ideas out there, it was an easy sell.
- Exited Liberty Broadband
(LBRDK): This was actually the toughest
decision in the portfolio, since Charter Communications (LBRDK
just owns Charter and a subsidiary) is a fantastic business with good opportunities ahead of it. There are some very good public write-ups about why
Charter Comms (and thus LBRDK) will be worth substantially more in the future,
and OM largely agrees with them.
In the end there were just things OM has greater confidence in.
- Bought Texas Pacific Land
Trust (TPL): TPL is a publicly traded
land trust that’s self-liquidating as it buys back shares with excess
cash. The trust benefits primarily from
oil & gas royalties (the Trust’s land is located in the Permian basin),
which have risen over the last 4-years even as the oil price has fallen. Interestingly, in the middle of the year the
Trust announced the formation of a subsidiary to provide water resources. Given TPL owns the water rights under its
land, there is opportunity to supply water to drilling companies and find ways
to recycle the (non-potable) water that’s a byproduct of drilling.
Currencies
- Exited Short Euro (EUO): Our
Man exited the short Euro trade in mid-late August. Though it’s been a fantastic contributor over
a number of years, the end was bittersweet – as noted previously, it should
have happened earlier in 2017. The exit
also marked the end of Our Man’s dollar bull thesis – in its various guises
(and including the Short Australia dollar positions, within the China Thesis)
it ended up contributing over 1,000bps to performance! It should have
been more 😔...
China
Thesis:
- Added to Chinese A-Shares
(ASHR): Our Man materially added to the
A-shares position during the quarter.
China is a swirling surfeit of liquidity seeking somewhere to call home, drive up
prices and then move on once more when the authorities play whack-a-mole. We've seen it at least once each in real estate, domestic equities, commodities, and
most recently bitcoin. With the
authorities making it harder to invest in bitcoin (the latest home), the liquidity is on the hunt
once more. OM is wagering that the 19th
National Congress starting in Q4, will offer the stability for local equities
to shine once more after the boom/bust of 2015.
Technically, they’re setting up well and OM wouldn’t rule out a run at
2015 (or even 2007) highs.
- Exited Short Australian
Dollar (CROC): Much like the short Euro
position, OM exited this position during the middle of the quarter. Unlike the Euro position, the sin wasn't holding it too long, it was re-entering/sizing it in Q2 despite the technicals looking
unattractive.
Commodity:
- Added to Uranium
(URA): OM sized up the position in
Uranium mining companies (URA) after the recent pullback held above its
2016/2017 lows (spot uranium also held above its 2016 lows). This coupled with Japanese power plants
slowly coming online and the supply discipline holding creates an interesting
opportunity.
Performance and Review
The second quarter saw OM’s portfolio rise 512bps, while the S&P 500 (TR)
rose 4.5% and the MSCI World was up 4.1%.
For the year, this left OM’s portfolio +13.4% compared to +14.2% for the
S&P 500 (TR) and +13.0% for the MSCI World.
Performance was driven by the
International/Country book (+476bps), with Brazil being the primary contributor
(just over 300bps). As noted above,
Brazil bounced back sharply from Q2’s Temer-related fall, and OM was helped by
added to the position in the quarter.
Argentina and Italy were also healthy contributors.
The Technical book (+124bps)
was a direct beneficiary of the market rise.
The Funds book (+39bps) also rose with the market, though it
underperformed during the quarter but remains comfortably ahead of the
market in 2017. The Equity book (+14bps)
was only a marginal contributor with negative performance from Vipshop Holdings
(VIPS, -59bps) offsetting most of the gains driver by Liberty Broadband (LBRDK,
+36bps) and Biotech (IBB, +34bps).
The China Thesis (-42bps) and
the Currencies book (-81bps) both detracted from performance due to the long
Dollar exposure before those positions exited the portfolio. Finally, the Commodities book (-18bps) hurt
as Uranium stocks continued to muddle around.
Portfolio
(as at 9/30 - all delta and leverage adjusted, as appropriate)
41.4% - International (Brazil, Argentina, India and Greece)
25.7% - Technical (DDM, QLD
and SSO)
15.9% - Equities (JD, VIPS,
TPL, FNMA & IBB)
10.3% - Funds (CWS, GVAL, and CAPE)
9.4% - China-Related Thesis (ASHR)
7.3% - Commodities (URA)
2.9% - Cash
Disclaimer: Nothing above represents a recommendation in any
way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take the above 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.
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