In continuation
of reading the Buffet Partnership Letters, here is the 5th part in the
series. You can read the previous posts here:
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part I
Part II
Part III
Last year in commenting on the inability of the overwhelming majority of investment managers to achieve
performance superior to that of pure chance, I ascribed it primarily to
the product of: "(1) group decisions - my perhaps jaundiced view is that
it is close to impossible for outstanding investment management to come
from a group of any size with all parties really participating in
decisions; (2) a desire to conform to the policies and (to an extent)
the portfolios of other large well-regarded organizations; (3) an
institutional framework whereby average is "safe" and the personal
rewards for independent action are in no way commensurate with the
general risk attached to such action; (4) an adherence to certain
diversification practices which are irrational; and finally and
importantly, (5) inertia.”
We
diversify substantially less than most investment operations. We might
invest up to 40% of our net worth in a single security under conditions
coupling an extremely high probability that our facts and reasoning are
correct with a very low probability that anything could drastically
change the underlying value of the investment."
We
have to work extremely hard to find just a very few attractive
investment situations. Among the few we do find, the expectations vary
substantially. The question always is, “How much do I put in number one
(ranked by expectation of relative performance) and how much do I put in
number eight?" This depends to a great degree on the wideness of the
spread between the mathematical expectation of number one versus number
eight.” It also depends upon the probability that number one could turn
in a really poor relative performance.
If
good performance of the fund is even a minor objective, any portfolio
encompassing one hundred stocks (whether the manager is handling one
thousand dollars or one billion dollars) is not being operated
logically. The addition of the one hundredth stock simply can't reduce
the potential variance in portfolio performance sufficiently to
compensate for the negative effect its inclusion has on the overall
portfolio expectation. Anyone owning such numbers of securities after
presumably studying their investment merit (and I don't care how
prestigious their labels) is following what I call the Noah School of
Investing - two of everything. Such investors should be piloting arks.