作者stasis (流雨风雪)
看板Trading
标题Mr. Buffett on the Stock Market
时间Sun Nov 4 14:14:30 2007
"Mr. Buffett on the Stock Market," 11/22/99. A reprint of Buffett's Fortune
magazine article, in which Buffett presciently warns investors about the tech
bubble and argues that stock market returns for the foreseeable will be in
the mid-single digits. To read it, click
Fortune
Vol. 140, No. 10
November 22, 1999
Mr. Buffett on the Stock Market
The most celebrated of investors says stocks can't possibly meet the public's
expectations. As for the Internet? He notes how few people got rich from two
other transforming industries, auto and aviation.
Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, almost never talks publicly
about the general level of stock prices--neither in his famed annual report
nor at Berkshire's thronged annual meetings nor in the rare speeches he
gives. But in the past few months, on four occasions, Buffett did step up to
that subject, laying out his opinions, in ways both analytical and creative,
about the long-term future for stocks. FORTUNE's Carol Loomis heard the last
of those talks, given in September to a group of Buffett's friends (of whom
she is one), and also watched a videotape of the first speech, given in July
at Allen & Co.'s Sun Valley, Idaho, bash for business leaders. From those
extemporaneous talks (the first made with the Dow Jones industrial average at
11,194), Loomis distilled the following account of what Buffett said. Buffett
reviewed it and weighed in with some clarifications.
Investors in stocks these days are expecting far too much, and I'm going to
explain why. That will inevitably set me to talking about the general stock
market, a subject I'm usually unwilling to discuss. But I want to make one
thing clear going in: Though I will be talking about the level of the market,
I will not be predicting its next moves. At Berkshire we focus almost
exclusively on the valuations of individual companies, looking only to a very
limited extent at the valuation of the overall market. Even then, valuing the
market has nothing to do with where it's going to go next week or next month
or next year, a line of thought we never get into. The fact is that markets
behave in ways, sometimes for a very long stretch, that are not linked to
value. Sooner or later, though, value counts. So what I am going to be
saying--assuming it's correct--will have implications for the long-term
results to be realized by American stockholders.
Let's start by defining "investing." The definition is simple but often
forgotten: Investing is laying out money now to get more money back in the
future--more money in real terms, after taking inflation into account.
Now, to get some historical perspective, let's look back at the 34 years
before this one--and here we are going to see an almost Biblical kind of
symmetry, in the sense of lean years and fat years--to observe what happened
in the stock market. Take, to begin with, the first 17 years of the period,
from the end of 1964 through 1981. Here's what took place in that interval:
Dow Jones Industrial Average
Dec. 31, 1964: 874.12
Dec. 31, 1981: 875.00
Now I'm known as a long-term investor and a patient guy, but that is not my
idea of a big move.
And here's a major and very opposite fact: During that same 17 years, the GDP
of the U.S.--that is, the business being done in this country--almost
quintupled, rising by 370%. Or, if we look at another measure, the sales of
the FORTUNE 500 (a changing mix of companies, of course) more than sextupled.
And yet the Dow went exactly nowhere.
To understand why that happened, we need first to look at one of the two
important variables that affect investment results: interest rates. These act
on financial valuations the way gravity acts on matter: The higher the rate,
the greater the downward pull. That's because the rates of return that
investors need from any kind of investment are directly tied to the risk-free
rate that they can earn from government securities. So if the government rate
rises, the prices of all other investments must adjust downward, to a level
that brings their expected rates of return into line. Conversely, if
government interest rates fall, the move pushes the prices of all other
investments upward. The basic proposition is this: What an investor should
pay today for a dollar to be received tomorrow can only be determined by
first looking at the risk-free interest rate.
Consequently, every time the risk-free rate moves by one basis point--by
0.01%--the value of every investment in the country changes. People can see
this easily in the case of bonds, whose value is normally affected only by
interest rates. In the case of equities or real estate or farms or whatever,
other very important variables are almost always at work, and that means the
effect of interest rate changes is usually obscured. Nonetheless, the
effect--like the invisible pull of gravity--is constantly there.
In the 1964-81 period, there was a tremendous increase in the rates on
long-term government bonds, which moved from just over 4% at year-end 1964 to
more than 15% by late 1981. That rise in rates had a huge depressing effect
on the value of all investments, but the one we noticed, of course, was the
price of equities. So there--in that tripling of the gravitational pull of
interest rates--lies the major explanation of why tremendous growth in the
economy was accompanied by a stock market going nowhere.
Then, in the early 1980s, the situation reversed itself. You will remember
Paul Volcker coming in as chairman of the Fed and remember also how unpopular
he was. But the heroic things he did--his taking a two-by-four to the economy
and breaking the back of inflation--caused the interest rate trend to
reverse, with some rather spectacular results. Let's say you put $1 million
into the 14% 30-year U.S. bond issued Nov. 16, 1981, and reinvested the
coupons. That is, every time you got an interest payment, you used it to buy
more of that same bond. At the end of 1998, with long-term governments by
then selling at 5%, you would have had $8,181,219 and would have earned an
annual return of more than 13%.
That 13% annual return is better than stocks have done in a great many
17-year periods in history--in most 17-year periods, in fact. It was a
helluva result, and from none other than a stodgy bond.
The power of interest rates had the effect of pushing up equities as well,
though other things that we will get to pushed additionally. And so here's
what equities did in that same 17 years: If you'd invested $1 million in the
Dow on Nov. 16, 1981, and reinvested all dividends, you'd have had
$19,720,112 on Dec. 31, 1998. And your annual return would have been 19%.
The increase in equity values since 1981 beats anything you can find in
history. This increase even surpasses what you would have realized if you'd
bought stocks in 1932, at their Depression bottom--on its lowest day, July 8,
1932, the Dow closed at 41.22--and held them for 17 years.
The second thing bearing on stock prices during this 17 years was after-tax
corporate profits, which the chart, After-Tax Corporate Profits as a
Percentage of GDP, displays as a percentage of GDP. In effect, what this
chart tells you is what portion of the GDP ended up every year with the
shareholders of American business.
The chart, as you will see, starts in 1929. I'm quite fond of 1929, since
that's when it all began for me. My dad was a stock salesman at the time, and
after the Crash came, in the fall, he was afraid to call anyone--all those
people who'd been burned. So he just stayed home in the afternoons. And there
wasn't television then. Soooo ... I was conceived on or about Nov. 30, 1929
(and born nine months later, on Aug. 30, 1930), and I've forever had a kind
of warm feeling about the Crash.
As you can see, corporate profits as a percentage of GDP peaked in 1929, and
then they tanked. The left-hand side of the chart, in fact, is filled with
aberrations: not only the Depression but also a wartime profits boom--sedated
by the excess-profits tax--and another boom after the war. But from 1951 on,
the percentage settled down pretty much to a 4% to 6.5% range.
By 1981, though, the trend was headed toward the bottom of that band, and in
1982 profits tumbled to 3.5%. So at that point investors were looking at two
strong negatives: Profits were sub-par and interest rates were sky-high.
And as is so typical, investors projected out into the future what they were
seeing. That's their unshakable habit: looking into the rear-view mirror
instead of through the windshield. What they were observing, looking
backward, made them very discouraged about the country. They were projecting
high interest rates, they were projecting low profits, and they were
therefore valuing the Dow at a level that was the same as 17 years earlier,
even though GDP had nearly quintupled.
Now, what happened in the 17 years beginning with 1982? One thing that didn't
happen was comparable growth in GDP: In this second 17-year period, GDP less
than tripled. But interest rates began their descent, and after the Volcker
effect wore off, profits began to climb--not steadily, but nonetheless with
real power. You can see the profit trend in the chart, which shows that by
the late 1990s, after-tax profits as a percent of GDP were running close to
6%, which is on the upper part of the "normalcy" band. And at the end of
1998, long-term government interest rates had made their way down to that 5%.
These dramatic changes in the two fundamentals that matter most to investors
explain much, though not all, of the more than tenfold rise in equity
prices--the Dow went from 875 to 9,181--during this 17-year period. What was
at work also, of course, was market psychology. Once a bull market gets under
way, and once you reach the point where everybody has made money no matter
what system he or she followed, a crowd is attracted into the game that is
responding not to interest rates and profits but simply to the fact that it
seems a mistake to be out of stocks. In effect, these people superimpose an
I-can't-miss-the-party factor on top of the fundamental factors that drive
the market. Like Pavlov's dog, these "investors" learn that when the bell
rings--in this case, the one that opens the New York Stock Exchange at 9:30
a.m.--they get fed. Through this daily reinforcement, they become convinced
that there is a God and that He wants them to get rich.
Today, staring fixedly back at the road they just traveled, most investors
have rosy expectations. A Paine Webber and Gallup Organization survey
released in July shows that the least experienced investors--those who have
invested for less than five years--expect annual returns over the next ten
years of 22.6%. Even those who have invested for more than 20 years are
expecting 12.9%.
Now, I'd like to argue that we can't come even remotely close to that 12.9%,
and make my case by examining the key value-determining factors. Today, if an
investor is to achieve juicy profits in the market over ten years or 17 or
20, one or more of three things must happen. I'll delay talking about the
last of them for a bit, but here are the first two:
(1) Interest rates must fall further. If government interest rates, now at a
level of about 6%, were to fall to 3%, that factor alone would come close to
doubling the value of common stocks. Incidentally, if you think interest
rates are going to do that--or fall to the 1% that Japan has experienced--you
should head for where you can really make a bundle: bond options.
(2) Corporate profitability in relation to GDP must rise. You know, someone
once told me that New York has more lawyers than people. I think that's the
same fellow who thinks profits will become larger than GDP. When you begin to
expect the growth of a component factor to forever outpace that of the
aggregate, you get into certain mathematical problems. In my opinion, you
have to be wildly optimistic to believe that corporate profits as a percent
of GDP can, for any sustained period, hold much above 6%. One thing keeping
the percentage down will be competition, which is alive and well. In
addition, there's a public-policy point: If corporate investors, in
aggregate, are going to eat an ever-growing portion of the American economic
pie, some other group will have to settle for a smaller portion. That would
justifiably raise political problems--and in my view a major reslicing of the
pie just isn't going to happen.
So where do some reasonable assumptions lead us? Let's say that GDP grows at
an average 5% a year--3% real growth, which is pretty darn good, plus 2%
inflation. If GDP grows at 5%, and you don't have some help from interest
rates, the aggregate value of equities is not going to grow a whole lot more.
Yes, you can add on a bit of return from dividends. But with stocks selling
where they are today, the importance of dividends to total return is way down
from what it used to be. Nor can investors expect to score because companies
are busy boosting their per-share earnings by buying in their stock. The
offset here is that the companies are just about as busy issuing new stock,
both through primary offerings and those ever present stock options.
So I come back to my postulation of 5% growth in GDP and remind you that it
is a limiting factor in the returns you're going to get: You cannot expect to
forever realize a 12% annual increase--much less 22%--in the valuation of
American business if its profitability is growing only at 5%. The inescapable
fact is that the value of an asset, whatever its character, cannot over the
long term grow faster than its earnings do.
Now, maybe you'd like to argue a different case. Fair enough. But give me
your assumptions. If you think the American public is going to make 12% a
year in stocks, I think you have to say, for example, "Well, that's because I
expect GDP to grow at 10% a year, dividends to add two percentage points to
returns, and interest rates to stay at a constant level." Or you've got to
rearrange these key variables in some other manner. The Tinker Bell
approach--clap if you believe--just won't cut it.
Beyond that, you need to remember that future returns are always affected by
current valuations and give some thought to what you're getting for your
money in the stock market right now. Here are two 1998 figures for the
FORTUNE 500. The companies in this universe account for about 75% of the
value of all publicly owned American businesses, so when you look at the 500,
you're really talking about America Inc.
FORTUNE 500
1998 profits: $334,335,000,000
Market value on March 15, 1999: $9,907,233,000,000
As we focus on those two numbers, we need to be aware that the profits figure
has its quirks. Profits in 1998 included one very unusual item--a $16 billion
bookkeeping gain that Ford reported from its spinoff of Associates--and
profits also included, as they always do in the 500, the earnings of a few
mutual companies, such as State Farm, that do not have a market value.
Additionally, one major corporate expense, stock-option compensation costs,
is not deducted from profits. On the other hand, the profits figure has been
reduced in some cases by write-offs that probably didn't reflect economic
reality and could just as well be added back in. But leaving aside these
qualifications, investors were saying on March 15 this year that they would
pay a hefty $10 trillion for the $334 billion in profits.
Bear in mind--this is a critical fact often ignored--that investors as a
whole cannot get anything out of their businesses except what the businesses
earn. Sure, you and I can sell each other stocks at higher and higher prices.
Let's say the FORTUNE 500 was just one business and that the people in this
room each owned a piece of it. In that case, we could sit here and sell each
other pieces at ever-ascending prices. You personally might outsmart the next
fellow by buying low and selling high. But no money would leave the game when
that happened: You'd simply take out what he put in. Meanwhile, the
experience of the group wouldn't have been affected a whit, because its fate
would still be tied to profits. The absolute most that the owners of a
business, in aggregate, can get out of it in the end--between now and
Judgment Day--is what that business earns over time.
And there's still another major qualification to be considered. If you and I
were trading pieces of our business in this room, we could escape
transactional costs because there would be no brokers around to take a bite
out of every trade we made. But in the real world investors have a habit of
wanting to change chairs, or of at least getting advice as to whether they
should, and that costs money--big money. The expenses they bear--I call them
frictional costs--are for a wide range of items. There's the market maker's
spread, and commissions, and sales loads, and 12b-1 fees, and management
fees, and custodial fees, and wrap fees, and even subscriptions to financial
publications. And don't brush these expenses off as irrelevancies. If you
were evaluating a piece of investment real estate, would you not deduct
management costs in figuring your return? Yes, of course--and in exactly the
same way, stock market investors who are figuring their returns must face up
to the frictional costs they bear.
And what do they come to? My estimate is that investors in American stocks
pay out well over $100 billion a year--say, $130 billion--to move around on
those chairs or to buy advice as to whether they should! Perhaps $100 billion
of that relates to the FORTUNE 500. In other words, investors are dissipating
almost a third of everything that the FORTUNE 500 is earning for them--that
$334 billion in 1998--by handing it over to various types of chair-changing
and chair-advisory "helpers." And when that handoff is completed, the
investors who own the 500 are reaping less than a $250 billion return on
their $10 trillion investment. In my view, that's slim pickings.
Perhaps by now you're mentally quarreling with my estimate that $100 billion
flows to those "helpers." How do they charge thee? Let me count the ways.
Start with transaction costs, including commissions, the market maker's take,
and the spread on underwritten offerings: With double counting stripped out,
there will this year be at least 350 billion shares of stock traded in the
U.S., and I would estimate that the transaction cost per share for each
side--that is, for both the buyer and the seller--will average 6 cents. That
adds up to $42 billion.
Move on to the additional costs: hefty charges for little guys who have wrap
accounts; management fees for big guys; and, looming very large, a raft of
expenses for the holders of domestic equity mutual funds. These funds now
have assets of about $3.5 trillion, and you have to conclude that the annual
cost of these to their investors--counting management fees, sales loads,
12b-1 fees, general operating costs--runs to at least 1%, or $35 billion.
And none of the damage I've so far described counts the commissions and
spreads on options and futures, or the costs borne by holders of variable
annuities, or the myriad other charges that the "helpers" manage to think up.
In short, $100 billion of frictional costs for the owners of the FORTUNE
500--which is 1% of the 500's market value--looks to me not only highly
defensible as an estimate, but quite possibly on the low side.
It also looks like a horrendous cost. I heard once about a cartoon in which a
news commentator says, "There was no trading on the New York Stock Exchange
today. Everyone was happy with what they owned." Well, if that were really
the case, investors would every year keep around $130 billion in their
pockets.
Let me summarize what I've been saying about the stock market: I think it's
very hard to come up with a persuasive case that equities will over the next
17 years perform anything like--anything like--they've performed in the past
17. If I had to pick the most probable return, from appreciation and
dividends combined, that investors in aggregate--repeat, aggregate--would
earn in a world of constant interest rates, 2% inflation, and those ever
hurtful frictional costs, it would be 6%. If you strip out the inflation
component from this nominal return (which you would need to do however
inflation fluctuates), that's 4% in real terms. And if 4% is wrong, I believe
that the percentage is just as likely to be less as more.
Let me come back to what I said earlier: that there are three things that
might allow investors to realize significant profits in the market going
forward. The first was that interest rates might fall, and the second was
that corporate profits as a percent of GDP might rise dramatically. I get to
the third point now: Perhaps you are an optimist who believes that though
investors as a whole may slog along, you yourself will be a winner. That
thought might be particularly seductive in these early days of the
information revolution (which I wholeheartedly believe in). Just pick the
obvious winners, your broker will tell you, and ride the wave.
Well, I thought it would be instructive to go back and look at a couple of
industries that transformed this country much earlier in this century:
automobiles and aviation. Take automobiles first: I have here one page, out
of 70 in total, of car and truck manufacturers that have operated in this
country. At one time, there was a Berkshire car and an Omaha car. Naturally I
noticed those. But there was also a telephone book of others.
All told, there appear to have been at least 2,000 car makes, in an industry
that had an incredible impact on people's lives. If you had foreseen in the
early days of cars how this industry would develop, you would have said,
"Here is the road to riches." So what did we progress to by the 1990s? After
corporate carnage that never let up, we came down to three U.S. car
companies--themselves no lollapaloozas for investors. So here is an industry
that had an enormous impact on America--and also an enormous impact, though
not the anticipated one, on investors.
Sometimes, incidentally, it's much easier in these transforming events to
figure out the losers. You could have grasped the importance of the auto when
it came along but still found it hard to pick companies that would make you
money. But there was one obvious decision you could have made back then--it's
better sometimes to turn these things upside down--and that was to short
horses. Frankly, I'm disappointed that the Buffett family was not short
horses through this entire period. And we really had no excuse: Living in
Nebraska, we would have found it super-easy to borrow horses and avoid a
"short squeeze."
U.S. Horse Population
1900: 21 million
1998: 5 million
The other truly transforming business invention of the first quarter of the
century, besides the car, was the airplane--another industry whose plainly
brilliant future would have caused investors to salivate. So I went back to
check out aircraft manufacturers and found that in the 1919-39 period, there
were about 300 companies, only a handful still breathing today. Among the
planes made then--we must have been the Silicon Valley of that age--were both
the Nebraska and the Omaha, two aircraft that even the most loyal Nebraskan
no longer relies upon.
Move on to failures of airlines. Here's a list of 129 airlines that in the
past 20 years filed for bankruptcy. Continental was smart enough to make that
list twice. As of 1992, in fact--though the picture would have improved since
then--the money that had been made since the dawn of aviation by all of this
country's airline companies was zero. Absolutely zero.
Sizing all this up, I like to think that if I'd been at Kitty Hawk in 1903
when Orville Wright took off, I would have been farsighted enough, and
public-spirited enough--I owed this to future capitalists--to shoot him down.
I mean, Karl Marx couldn't have done as much damage to capitalists as Orville
did.
I won't dwell on other glamorous businesses that dramatically changed our
lives but concurrently failed to deliver rewards to U.S. investors: the
manufacture of radios and televisions, for example. But I will draw a lesson
from these businesses: The key to investing is not assessing how much an
industry is going to affect society, or how much it will grow, but rather
determining the competitive advantage of any given company and, above all,
the durability of that advantage. The products or services that have wide,
sustainable moats around them are the ones that deliver rewards to investors.
This talk of 17-year periods makes me think--incongruously, I admit--of
17-year locusts. What could a current brood of these critters, scheduled to
take flight in 2016, expect to encounter? I see them entering a world in
which the public is less euphoric about stocks than it is now. Naturally,
investors will be feeling disappointment--but only because they started out
expecting too much.
Grumpy or not, they will have by then grown considerably wealthier, simply
because the American business establishment that they own will have been
chugging along, increasing its profits by 3% annually in real terms. Best of
all, the rewards from this creation of wealth will have flowed through to
Americans in general, who will be enjoying a far higher standard of living
than they do today. That wouldn't be a bad world at all--even if it doesn't
measure up to what investors got used to in the 17 years just passed.
--
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1F:推 wmh1109:S大大可不可以划一下重点啊?眼睛都快花了!感恩 11/04 22:26