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Jim Tisch's "$5 Million Test" for InvestingBy
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Who is Jim Tisch?
He's known best for beating the world's greatest investor – Warren Buffett – at his own game...
Tisch became CEO of holding company Loews Corp. in the late 1990s. Since then, he's beaten Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway in terms of "book value" (shareholder value), Buffett's favorite performance barometer. Tisch grew Loews' book value by 10% a year from 1998 (when he took over) through 2011. But Buffett only grew Berkshire's book value by 8% in that same time.
Beating Buffett by 2% a year might not sound like much... But that kind of outperformance really "compounds" over time. So Tisch's share price has dramatically outperformed Buffett's as well... While the stock market has been relatively flat since 2000, Berkshire has risen over 100%. Loews is up by nearly 400% in that time – a truly incredible performance.
What's Tisch's secret?
Like Buffett, he has had great success buying incredible values at just the right price.
And what I love is that Tisch has done it in an uncomplicated way... using his simple "$5 million test" to make many times his money...
"What is the 'Jim Tisch $5 million test'?" you may ask.
Tisch explained how it works in a speech he gave a few years ago at Columbia University. He used his personal experience of buying oil supertankers in the early 1980s...
At the time, those ships were literally selling for less than their scrap metal value. So Tisch bought them up. Less than a decade later, he basically sold them for 10 times his purchase price. Not a bad trade!
Tisch used his "$5 million test" again in 1990...
Today, a single offshore oil rig costs around $750 million. So at $5 million each, Tisch made out pretty well. (Tisch ended up buying 39 rigs... and his company became Diamond Offshore Drilling.)
Tisch was not an oil expert going into this. He just saw value, plain and simple...
(You can read the full Columbia speech here.)
I am personally applying Tisch's "$5 million test" (on a smaller scale) as I size up real estate opportunities in Northeast Florida. Jim was no expert in oil when he bought – he just saw incredible value. I am no expert in real estate here... I just see incredible value.
Sometimes you can keep it simple. The basic analysis doesn't have to be complicated.
One of the knocks against Tisch (and Loews Corp.) these days, is that he hasn't done a big deal (like the ones above) in a while.
But that's fine with me. I know when the time comes and he puts his thumb in the air, applies his $5 million test, and something passes, investors will be better off.
Don't complicate your investing decisions...
Tisch has beaten the world's greatest investor by keeping it simple, waiting until he sees incredible value, and then buying.
Keep it simple. Follow Tisch's lead. And maybe you, too, can beat Buffett...
Good investing,
Steve
Further Reading:
Read up on some of Steve's favorite "tests" here...
"In order to become a successful long-term investor, it's critical you understand The Stupid Test," he writes.
"Do what works... History shows you'll be well-rewarded if you do."
Market NotesCOULD OIL FALL TO $50 PER BARREL? How far can oil fall?
That's the question many folks have after reading bearish commentary from our colleague Porter Stansberry. Porter notes how new drilling technologies are causing a surge in North American oil production... which will send oil prices plummeting.
To arrive at a rough estimate of how low oil can go, we consult the price action of crude oil over the past three-and-a-half years. As you can see from our chart, crude oil struck a credit crisis low around $35 per barrel in 2009. It then soared to nearly $115 per barrel over the next two years. This uptrend is faltering, however, and oil has declined to $85 per barrel today.
Considering this wide range, surging North American production, and how the global economy is struggling, we look at this chart and say that oil could easily drop to $70 a barrel. Should the global economy falter from its already weak current level, a drop to $50 isn't out of the question. After all, just a few years ago, it was at that very price.
– Brian Hunt
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