Apollo Tyres: Buyer’s Remorse

Back in June this year, Apollo Tyres decided to buy US based Cooper Tyre & Rubber (CTB) for more than $2.5 billion, or $35 a share. Apollo was required to use its “reasonable best efforts” to get consents from any parties, like the steelworkers and its Chinese JV partner, whose approval is needed. In the meantime, the markets did not wait to show its hatred of the deal.

Apollo Tyres:

Apollo Tyres price chart

 

Cooper Tyre & Rubber:

 

Turns out that CTB has an underfunded UK pension scheme, which has only about two-thirds of the cash it needs to pay its promised pension benefits (a shortfall of £76.5m as at December 2012). And going into the deal, CTB’s management did not disclose that its Chinese partner had flirted with making a bid for the company. The pissed-off Chinese JV partner then organized a strike, put guards at the door and refused to allow Cooper and Apollo access to its financials.

The shit-show doesn’t end there. Morgan Stanely and other bankers involved in the deal have been unable to find buyers for the bonds that were supposed to finance the deal.  Apollo was planning to borrow more than $2.3 billion to pay for Cooper’s shares, and had plans to finance its $450 million equity slice as well.

Looks like the only option for Apollo is to stall for long enough that CTB is forced to file third-quarter financial statements. At which point it can try and wriggle out of the deal saying that key financial information was not disclosed during the time of the deal. However, CTB is having none of it. The company has dragged Apollo to court in its attempt to make it sign on the dotted line.

The question is what is Apollo going to do if it is instructed by the court to complete the deal but can’t find the financing promised by its banks? Interesting days ahead…

 

[stockquote]APOLLOTYRE[/stockquote]

Pedal to the Metal

We are in the middle of what can be best described as the most hated rally of all time. Retail investors have been sellers, having seen similar highs three times already. And economists, who should know better than to opine about the stock-markets, have labeled the rally as “without underlying fundamentals.”

But seasoned investors will know that the market is forward looking and its default setting is “optimism.” Who knows when this rally will end? But as long as it lasts, its time to press as hard on the accelerator as you can.

Go High Beta!

We created an Investment Theme a few days ago that consists of a portfolio of fairly liquid high beta stocks. It has beaten the cr@p out of every other portfolio so far. You can have a look at the theme here: Market Fliers

 
[stockquote]PRECOT[/stockquote]

Investors buy more following a CNBC interview conducted by an attractive anchorwoman

Some of the academic research we follow here at StockViz show how bizarre human decision making is. Consider this fine example (pdf):

  • Investors get excited by the pre-announcement of the interview and ramp shares higher: from days -2 to 0 (interview day) firms experience a positive 4-factor abnormal return of 1.62%
  • Then experience a negative abnormal return of -1.08% over the next ten days.
  • There is abnormal amount of trading by individual investors on days the CEO is interviewed by CNBC.
  • They keep on buying if the interview was both carried out by attractive anchorwoman and was watched by more male viewers.

It seems that we use a different head to trade when we see attractive women…

The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: Are you a perma-bear or perma-bull?

Holding on to our view is not a behavioral pitfall that plagues investors alone. It’s a fairly common characteristic of all humans. In the last chapter of The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy, James Montier pointed out the perils of the confirmatory bias. In this chapter, he talks about “conservatism” which in combination with the confirmatory bias becomes deadly for investors.

Cover of "The Little Book of Behavioral I...

Earlier in Chapter 6, Montier revealed the effect information has on our confidence levels. The more data we get to throw around in our head, the more confident we become of our decisions. However, access to increasing amounts of data does little to improve the accuracy of our final decision. Similarly, investors resist changing their sell or buy decisions once they’ve made up their minds. Even when new evidence comes to fore that implies their earlier decision may be flawed, they tend to under-react, selecting not to change their stand or do it very slowly – a behavioral pattern called “anchoring.”

Conservatism is also why perma-bears usually stay perma-bears for life as do perma-bulls. Anyone who tries to break this mold is subjected to abject torture. Well, not really. But certainly, the act does not get the approval of the respective sacrosanct groups. Why is that? It’s bad enough that we’re not flexible in our decision-making process. Do we also need to pull down those who dare to be different? It’s a truth that reigns across the globe. Sacred wars, hatred killings, road rage, social ostracism – aren’t all these a more extreme form of intolerance for different opinions and practices? But let me not go off on a tangent.

Montier links the attitudes of perma-bears to conservatism. They are always negative about the market and weirdly enough, have nothing to do with money management on the ground. These people are highly paid for their pessimistic discourses and market trend postmortems. They’re respected and ardently followed. What you learn from them is to be afraid. Stay scared, stay safe. And where does that take you in the investor’s world? Not very far from where you started.

The absurdity of investor conservatism was on naked display recently when ex-Merrill, and now Gluskin Sheff’s Chief Economist, David Rosenberg recently got more constructive on the economy and the markets this year. Investors who followed his briefs were mad at him for “abandoning” them. “It was never about his analysis; it was always about him adding intellectual heft to their pessimism and quasi-political partially religious desire for the collapse of the system. Their worldview was that things were in permanent decline and his sophisticated charts added a veneer of respectability to their pre-existing biases,” says Joshua M Brown on StockTwits.

And as David’s rigorous analysis forced him to warm to the possibility of a healthy investing environment, they flipped out and turned on him. They were not mad at him for being wrong, they were mad at him for changing his mind!

Risk is part of this game and if you can’t handle it, you’ve no business here. That’s not to say that you go crazy with your investment portfolio. This means that you be willing to:

  1. admit that your initial view may be wrong,
  2. re-validate your position based on current research and close out possible losses, and
  3. take small risks for big gains.

How does that work?

Montier believes conservatism is why many investors miss out on vital turning points in the market. Since we don’t like change, we under-react to things that may compel us to revisit our decisions. When the market is unstable, investors hold their breath, waiting for the worst to pass. In the process, they miss precise signals that could get them big returns in time. Remember Chapter 2 – tagging companies worth investing if their price fell? Unstable markets are ripe with such opportunities.

Mistakenly, investors tend to overreact to every trend when the market is stable – a time when it’s best to turn down the noise. It’s a completely skewed strategy.

Beating conservatism is hard, terribly hard. Montier suggests a solution to beat ourselves in the game – start with a fresh slate. Recreate your investment cases based on current research and facts. If companies that figured in your initial plan are missing, it’s best to let them go.

In short, the market doesn’t care about your personal beliefs. And just like how cricket commentary doesn’t change the outcome of a match, pundits don’t make markets. Don’t lose sight of the fact that the goal is to earn a reasonable return on your investment.

 

Monica Samuel is doing a chapter-wise review of the book: The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy by James Montier. You can follow the series by following this tag: tlbbinvesting or by subscribing to this rss feed: tlbbifeed