Notes On The Art of Short Selling
Notes On The Art of Short Selling
Notes On The Art of Short Selling
"For the last week I've been carrying "The Art of Short Selling"
around with me just about everywhere. Every time I get a break, I
just open to a chapter. Doesn't matter if I've already read it. I just
read it again." - Michael Burry
These are my notes on Kathryn E Staley's Art of Short Selling. I
found this to be a stellar book filled with interesting market history
and techniques to help short sellers. The book was published in
1997 so the examples are bit aged and recommends slighted dated
sources for idea generation but I believe the foundation is timeless. I
do not detail all the vignettes -- I recommend buying/borrowing the
book for them -- but I tried to emphasis the players in short selling
and the techniques needed to be a more skillful short seller. I hope
you find these notes useful. All ideas belong to Kathryn F. Staley,
any misinterpretations are my own - Joshua Wallis
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Short-Selling-MarketplaceBook/dp/0471146323)
Art of Short Selling Chapter 1: Overview: Wealth with Risk
flaw. Alex Porter looks for companies where you can stay short
without pain or expense.
Joe DiMenna of Zweig Funds
Shorts five types of situations (1) frauds (2) earnings
disappointments (3) hyped stocks where there are holes in the Wall
Street's consensus estimation (4) industry themes were macro
forces are negative (5) a deteriorating balance sheet. He tends to
avoid stocks with strong earnings momentum solely based on
momentum. He waits for the stocks to break before getting
involved. He will avoid short candidates in a crowded field unless the
company is terminal
The Feshbach Brothers of California (Kurt, Joe, Matt and the nonFeshbach Tom Barton)
They founded their short found in 1982, at one point they managed
a lot more money than any other short sell fund. In 1990 they
managed $600 million. They look for terminal shorts with these four
characteristics
1. Stock prices overvalued by at least 2X IV
2. A fundamental problem at the company
3. A weak financial condition -- working-capital problems or high
long-term debt
4. Weak or crooked management
The brothers consistently look for dodgy stock promoters like the
OTC Review's editor, Bob Flaherty
(http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1989-0226/business/8903080465_1_penny-stocks-penny-stock-stockmarket) . Their first success short was Universal Energy. Feshbachs
work intensively and have information overkill. They don't short a
stock unless there can be a price decline of 50%.
An example of their work is Kirschner Medical. Any analyst could
show they had 400 days of inventory but their analysis showed they
had $10M of obsolete inventory. "The reason we put so much
emphasis on phone calls to competitors, suppliers, and customers is
that's where we get our edge --in discovering what drives the
numbers. Everybody knows that the numbers are on historical basis.
Major short ideas are based on extensive credit work. When shorting
Caterpillar Tractors in 1984, he the main customers (oil drillers,
mining companies, South American countries) were now broke or
short on cash. Even though their customers were now broke, Wall
Street was still expecting earnings of $4 in earnings per share. The
company ended up losing $5 a share and because McBear realized
the industry was changing it gave him insight into a structural
problem in the economy.
Jim Chanos
At 24 he called the Baldwin-United bankruptcy. (note, book was
published in 1997, so things might have changed.) He doesn't short
frauds with small floats because of size restraints and generally
doesn't have a problem with buy ins because he focuses on largecap stocks. He maintains a concentrated portfolio of about 30 stocks
with 10 positions accounting for more than 50 percent of his
portfolio.
He typically shorts stocks where there are secular problems and the
equity value is worth 0. He uses return on invested capital as a key
financial indicator. "That ratio will reveal a lot of wormy companies
and poor businesses. It's a tough number to screw around with. "
Chanos on financial companies "leverage inherent in some of these
companies is incredible. When the accounting gets murky, people
tend to shy away from rigorous analysis and rely on management
and just take earnings per share at face value. Therein lays the
opportunity."
When Chanos analyzed Baldwin-United he had to dig deep into tax
accounting, research affiliated company transactions which
convinced him the stock was a zero. The stock went from 20 to 50
dollars during his sell recommendation,and then Baldwin-United
went bankrupt.
[This book was published before his famous Enron coup]
Art of Short Selling Chapter 3: Bubble Stocks
Often times the most brutal shorts are with companies with no
assets or revenues. They are companies with a pipeline, either a
baseball cards and sports memorabilia, J. Bildner & Sons that offered
upscale yuppy 7-Elevans, Jiffy Lube with its aggressive financing to
franchisees and competitive landscape.
Art of Short Selling Chapters 5-10:
Beverages:
Cott Corporation
Snapple Beverage Corporation
High Tech: Media Vision
Chapter 6: If You Can't Read It, Short It
National Education
Autotote
The Weasel: Western Savings and Loan
Insurance Companies: Who's on First?
Check out insurance commission filings at NAIC
(https://eapps.naic.org/cis/) Kathryn Staley offers a roadmap on how
to go through NAIC filings to check asset allocations and reserves of
insurance companies. Staley recommends: Clair and Joseph
Galloway's Handbook of Accounting for Insurance
Companies. (http://www.amazon.com/Handbook-AccountingInsurance-Companies-Galloway/dp/0070227454) This book goes for
70+ on Amazon.
"Experience suggests that if you cannot understand a report,
officers are hiding something worse than you expect. It's almost an
iceberg phenomena: If you find five or six serious questions in
financial statements, you can be sure that there are many more that
you cannot see. If a call to the company for explanation receives a
garbled response that sounds suspiciously like the company official
is speaking in tongues, you have go a live one."
Companies with no profit and little revenue can survive longer than
rationally expected if they can promise prospective shareholders a
bright future. Mining companies, technology companies
and pharmaceutical companies are commonly guilty of this -- look at
the Cash Flow from Financing to see if the cash normally stems from
equity raises.
[Bronte Capital mentioned a pharmaceutical company that is guilty
of this. Galena Biopharma (GALE) -- consistently goes to the market
for equity raises. Bronte Capital outline's dodgy business practices
here: http://brontecapital.blogspot.com/2014/02/get-your-opiatesfor-free-capitalism.html]
Chapter 8: If You Can't Fix It, Sell It
5.
Fear causes short sellers to buy back their positions after a
large run up. Generally if it scares you to death to short more of a
company, the better move is to short more.
6.
Be able to change your outlook if the facts change. Don't stick
with the same thesis if the facts change.
7.
It is easy to fall in love with your own analysis if the problem is
highly complex. If you spent loads of time in the analysis it is easy to
say you must have an opinion on the stock, when one might not be
recommended.
8.
Crowded short positions are also a problem. Amateur short
sellers might buy a position when one might not be recommended.
9.
Last but not least, shorting a company that is going through a
"hiccup", instead of shorting a company that's having it's core
business being overwhelmed. When a company is growing you can
hide bad accounting practices for a while. Never short a good
company.
Art of Short Selling Chapter 12: History and Controversy
obsolete inventories
bad loans
sale of securities
tax credits
change in account
Check the assumptions the company makes to book revenue and
read the notes that explaining earnings in the current period. Check
for any odd sources of revenue. Readjusted earning per share for
fully diluted shares. Adjusting for the fully diluted shares can be a bit
tricky, add in all convertible shares if they close to conversion or
likely to be converted and any options and warrants.
Important Ratios
Check to see if company is trying to appease the street by giving a
nice trend for earnings per share growth, and if so, see if they are
trying to massage the numbers. Look at capitalization: long-term
debt to equity, total debt to total capital, long-term debt to capital.
Compare several years of balance sheets to see the trend in these
ratios.
Check ROE, ROA and ROIA. ROIA (Return on invested assets) is
calculated by income before interest and taxes divided by equity
plus all interest-paying debt. Look for trends and volatility of returns
over time. It also tells, by comparison how the company does
relative to other companies in the same industry, whether the
company returns more than its average and marginal cost of debt,
currently and historically.
Checklist of Ratios
Capital Structure
Return Ratios
Valuation Ratios
return on equity
price to earnings
return on assets
price to revenues
fuzzy liabilities
read the financials, even their bosses do not. Use analysts for
indications of Street-think and as conduits of management
information. It is not good guys versus bad guys, shorts versus
analysts; the point is how effectively you use the information
presented to you."
"Forbes and Barron's do good, strong, analytical fact-finding. Nobody
fires them if they make waves. Many indexes carry only two or three
years of references, but make sure you have at least five because
ancient history is relevant to corporate hanky panky or to the firm's
cultural tradition of hanky panky"
6. Pay Attention
If you decide not to short a stock based on your preliminary
analysis, it might be a good idea next year. if you short now, watch
it. Events move slowly in the financial world, it can be hard to
maintain concentration.
First watch for earnings releases. Note when they are expected to be
published and what Street expectations are. The date of the
earnings release is also statistically relevant: the later they are, the
worse the numbers. Many companies will fax the PR release,
together with the income statements and balance sheet. Quick
information is important. If it is a large, Street-covered stock small
investors are at a disadvantage because Street analysts get the
faxes and phone calls first, little players sometimes not until days
later.
Next, know when financials are expected out. The 10Qs and 10Ks
are read slowly by Wall Street, so quick attention can yield important
data -- little players can make up for the delay on receipt of
earnings-release information. Waiting for new financials is like
waiting for Christmas. It is fun to see if you were right and how
things are developing. Go first to the key numbers, then the cash
flow statement, finally the verbiage. Read the Qs carefully.
Keep watching -- once a potential target, always a possibility. If you
know a company well, you might recognize trigger, like the Zises'
selling their Integrate stock, or HBJ selling Shamu, or J. Billder's
closing stores or running over expected costs and out of money. Be
quick to admit defeat. If you are shorted the stock because the
investors were too high and the 10Q shows the company has
corrected the problem, cover--NOW.
Do not cover just because of price movements; wait until the
resolution of the scenario. If Integrated looks like death, wait till it is
buried. Short selling can be much like a cat waiting outside a mouse
hole - the level of persistence, patience, and attentiveness is not for
everyone, especially over sustained periods of time.
Concept Recap
The short seller's credo can be summarized into several points:
1. Dissent is Okay.
2. The facts are somewhere, free for the digging.
3. Hard work is old fashioned, so if you do a little, you will be far
ahead. Analyst look at company PR rather than fundamentals and
financials, and that provides opportunities and longer periods of
market inefficiencies.
4. Computers confuse and build false confidence in portfolio
managers, and that also provides opportunities.
5. Some accountants sanction everything, and that helps a lot, too.
6. Finally, Wall Street ices the inefficient cake with compulsive
conformity. Everyone gets on the bandwagon and stays until the
evidence is too compelling, then they all fall off with a jolt.
Conclusion
The key points to remember about selling, short selling or simply not
buying are several