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If All Investments Were Private

This piece is another one of my experiments, please bear with me. “Measure Twice, Cut Once” – A very intelligent woman (I suspect) whose name never got recorded the first time it was uttered “Only buy something that you’d be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years.” – Warren Buffett Imagine for a moment: The public secondary markets didn’t exist Investment pooling vehicles were all private, and no one published NAV estimates Stocks and bonds existed, but they were only formally offered through the companies themselves, and all private secondary trading was subject to a right of first refusal on the part of the issuing corporation. This includes short-term debts like commercial paper. Banks and life insurance companies still offer products to retail savers/investors, but nonforfeiture laws didn’t exist, and CD penalty clauses were very ugly. In other words, because of no public secondary markets, the price of liquidity was very high, with a strong incentive to hold financial instruments to their maturity date. Accounting rules are only partially standardized. Deposit insurance still exists. So does limited liability. In this thankfully fictitious world, what would investing be like? The main factor would be that liquidity would be dear. Because the “out” doors for liquidity are thin or closed for a long time, money would go into any investment only after great study. The 4 Cs of credit would be present with a vengeance – character, capacity, capital and conditions – and character would be chief among them as J. P. Morgan famously said. This would be true even if one were investing in the stock of a firm, rather than the debt. Investing in such a world, even with limited liability, is tantamount to an economic marriage back in a time where divorce was mostly for cause, and not easy to get. You’d have to be very certain of what you were doing. Perhaps you would diversify, but one would quickly realize how difficult it can be to keep up with a bunch of private firms – we take for granted how information flows today, but with private firms, you are subject to the board and management. What do they choose to share with outside passive minority investors? Excursus: It is said that it is easy to teach a child to say “please,” because it is the equivalent of “gimme.” It is harder to teach them “thank you,” until they realize that it means, “I’d like an option on the next deal.” Why would private firms choose to be open with outside private minority investors? They want a continuing flow of capital, and with no secondary markets, that can be difficult. Granted, there are always hucksters that say with P. T. Barnum, who is alleged to have said, ” There’s a sucker born every minute .” Those characters exist regardless of market structure, but in a healthy culture, they are a small minority in the markets. The same would apply to the debt markets. The fourth C, Conditions, would also impact matters. If you can’t get out easily/cheaply, then you will limit the term of the borrowing at which you are willing to lend, unless there are features allowing for participation in the upside, such as stock conversion rights. You might also find that insolvency becomes a very personal matter, as prior capital providers who know the business better than others, are invited to “prepackaged reorganizations” when the business is illiquid or insolvent. The bankruptcy code might still exist, but gaining enough data on a firm in trouble would probably prove difficult. The board and management, unless legally compelled, might not find it in their interests to be open. Control is a valuable option, one that is only surrendered when the situation is virtually hopeless. That said, a man very good at estimating character and business value could make some amazing profits, because “in the land of the blind, a one-eyed man is king.” And, the opposite would be true for many, as they get taken advantage of by less scrupulous management teams. Back to the Present “…[R]isk control is best done on the front end. On the back end, solutions are expensive, if they are available at all.” – Me, in this article , and a bunch of others. The purpose of what I just wrote is to get you to think about an illiquid world as a limiting concept. All of the problems of our world are there, usually in a form that is less severe than we experience because of the benefit of liquid secondary markets and vehicles for diversification. If valuable for no other reason, market panics make liquidity disappear, and it is useful to think about what you will do in an absence of liquidity before the time of trouble happens. The same is true of corporations needing liquidity. Buffett said something to the effect of, “Get financing before you need it; it may not be available later.” It’s also useful to consider more carefully the financial commitments that you make, so that you don’t make so many blunders. (True for me, too.) The ability to trade out of investments is useful but limited, because we don’t always recognize when we are wrong, and mechanical trading rules can lead us to the “death by one thousand cuts.” Beyond that, realize that character does matter. A lot. The government tries as hard as it can, but it is far better at punishing fraud after the fact than it is catching fraud before the fact. It will always be that way because the law is tilted in favor of the one in control; it has to be, or property rights are meaningless. But consider those that try to warn about financial disasters – they do not get listened to until it is too late. Madoff, Enron, housing bubble, various short sellers alleging improprieties, etc., etc. Very few listen to them, because seeming success talks far louder than an outsider. My counsel is the same as always, just look at the risk control quote above. But to make it stark, ask yourself this, a la Buffett, “Would you still buy this if you couldn’t sell it for ten years?” Then measure twice, thrice, ten times if needed, and cut once. Disclosure: None

Introducing Wealthfront 3.0

By Adam Nash When we launched Wealthfront in December 2011, the idea behind our first generation service was simple: take the best practices of investment management like diversification, rebalancing, dividend reinvestment and tax-loss harvesting, and automate them so investors could get these benefits without the high fees and high minimums of the traditional industry. The advent of low-cost ETFs and the relentlessly improving economics of consumer software made Wealthfront 1.0 possible. In December 2013, we launched Wealthfront 2.0. Our second generation service built a series of high value-added services that previously were only available to the wealthy, and layered them on top of our basic service. These innovative services include our Direct Indexing Platform, Single-Stock Diversification Service, and Automated Tax-Minimized Brokerage Transfers. No other automated investment service has yet been able to replicate any of these services. Today, we are on the cusp of something even bigger: the rise of artificial intelligence applied to financial services. We believe that over the next decade, artificial intelligence is poised to transform our industry. The entire fabric of the financial system will be rethought, redefined and rewired. In order to meet this future, we need to start building for it now. So I am excited to unveil the beginning of the next generation of Wealthfront – Wealthfront 3.0. Starting today, our clients will begin to see a new experience that lays the foundation for an advice engine rooted in artificial intelligence and modern APIs, an engine that we believe will deliver more relevant and personalized advice than ever before. We are building for a future where Wealthfront will be the only financial advisor our clients will ever need. Redesigning Wealthfront for the Future To deliver on this promise, our Vice President of Design, Kate Aronowitz , and her team had to rethink our entire client experience from the ground up. Our engineering team rebuilt our front-end architecture to display results based on original research from our world-class team . The result is an entirely redesigned Dashboard that will be the center of your financial life, from which all other services can plug into and provide you a complete picture of your net worth today and tomorrow. The first thing you will notice about the new Dashboard is a projection of your net worth designed to orient you towards the long term. You will see Wealthfront 3.0 come to life with relevant, data-driven advice each time you link an account or third party service to your Dashboard. Only Wealthfront provides recommendations on diversification, taxes and fees that are personalized not only to the specific investments in your account, but also to your specific financial profile and risk tolerance. Do you have enough cash in your emergency fund? Are you holding too much stock in your employer? Wealthfront will help you. Over 60% of Wealthfront clients are under 35, and not surprisingly, many of the financial services they use are built with modern APIs for direct integration. Wealthfront 3.0 will feature direct integrations with platforms like Venmo, Redfin, Lending Club and Coinbase as well as bank accounts and external brokerage accounts. Anyone who has ever registered for a bank or brokerage account provides their address, but with Wealthfront 3.0 that information is used to automatically integrate with modern services to give up-to-date financial advice about your home. Actions Speak Louder Than Words We’re firm believers that artificial intelligence applied to your actual behavior will provide far more powerful advice than what traditional advisors offer today. The reason is quite simple: actions speak louder than words . Observed behavior can’t be fudged on the phone or lied about in person. More importantly, observed behavior may reveal insights about ourselves that we aren’t even consciously aware of. Wealthfront has been built from the ground up with the same social contract that is at the heart of fiduciary advisor: our clients trust us with the relevant details of their financial lives and we keep their information private and secure. Our advocacy for a fiduciary standard is based on the premise that it will lead to far better advice and outcomes. We understand that many older investors who meet the high minimums of the traditional industry will continue to find more comfort in a personal relationship with a traditional advisor and we respect that. However, we are building our service for a new generation of investors, and designing it to grow with the profound capabilities we expect from intelligent services in their lifetimes. The Future Starts Today On March 9th, the world was stunned when Google DeepMind defeated legendary Go player Lee Se-dol . Over the next decade various forms of artificial intelligence will be brought to bear on every industry, including financial services. This intelligence will be built on modern platforms that translate data delivered by APIs into relevant advice. We believe the ultimate financial impact of artificial intelligence on society will be far bigger than what we are building at Wealthfront. These changes will not just impact the next few months or years, they will continue to accelerate over the next few decades. Over the next two months, Wealthfront clients will begin to see these features roll out progressively across our mobile and web experiences. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, and today is just the first of many. One thing is certain. Artificial intelligence is the only way to bring high quality and low cost financial advice to the millions and millions of people who don’t meet the high minimums of the traditional industry. Welcome to Wealthfront 3.0. We’re just getting started. About Adam Nash Adam Nash, Wealthfront’s CEO, is a proven advocate for development of products that go beyond utility to delight customers. Adam joined Wealthfront as COO after a stint at Greylock Partners as an Executive-in-Residence. Prior to Greylock, he was VP of Product Management at LinkedIn, where he built the teams responsible for core product, user experience, platform and mobile. Adam has held a number of leadership roles at eBay, including Director of eBay Express, as well as strategic and technical roles at Atlas Venture, Preview Systems and Apple. Adam holds an MBA from Harvard Business School and BS and MS degrees in Computer Science from Stanford University. Disclosure Nothing in this article should be construed as tax advice, a solicitation or offer, or recommendation, to buy or sell any security. Financial advisory services are only provided to investors who become Wealthfront clients. Product screenshots and projected returns do not represent actual accounts and may not reflect the effect of material economic and market factors. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Actual investors on Wealthfront may experience different results from the results shown.

It’s Not All About Earnings

Earnings, earnings, earnings: On Wall Street, profits are king. Headlines are filled with references to prominent companies’ earnings – panic often ensues if a firm falls even a few pennies short of analysts’ profit expectations. And when pundits talk about valuations, either of individual stocks or the market as a whole, they more often than not base their assessment on the price/earnings ratio. But earnings don’t always tell the whole story. In fact, oftentimes other metrics can provide an even better gauge of how a company or the market is doing. The Price/Sales Investor strategy I track on Validea.com is a good example. The key variable it looks at is the price/sales ratio – PSR – which compares a company’s market capitalization to the amount of sales it has taken in over the past year. The approach is inspired by the work of Kenneth Fisher, who in his 1984 investing classic Super Stocks pioneered the use of the PSR as a way to evaluate stocks. Fisher thought there was a major hole in the P/E ratio’s usefulness. Part of the problem, he explained, is that earnings – even earnings of good companies – can fluctuate greatly from year to year. The decision to replace equipment or facilities in one year rather than in another, the use of money for new research that will help the company reap profits later on, and changes in accounting methods can all turn one quarter’s profits into the next quarter’s losses, without regard for what’s truly important in the long term – how well or poorly the company’s underlying business was performing. But while earnings can fluctuate, Fisher found that sales were far more stable, and a better gauge of a company’s strength and prospects. On Validea.com, I track a number of strategies I’ve developed based on the approaches of history’s most successful investors. My 10-stock Price/Sales Investor portfolio is one of my best performers, averaging annualized returns of 10.5% since its mid-2003 inception vs. just 5.8% for the S&P 500. How exactly does the Price/Sales Investor strategy work? It starts, of course, with the PSR, looking for companies with PSRs below 1.5, and really getting excited when a PSR is under 0.75. One caveat: Because companies in what Fisher called “smokestack” industries – that is, industrial or manufacturing type firms that make the everyday products we use – grow slowly and don’t earn exceptionally high margins, they don’t generate a lot of excitement or command high prices on Wall Street. Their PSRs thus tend to be lower than those of companies that produce more exciting products. The Price/Sales Investor approach looks for smokestack firms with PSRs between 0.4 and 0.8; it is particularly high on those with PSR values under 0.4. The Price/Sales Investor method also incorporates several other criteria based on Fisher’s work. They include: average net profit margins of at least 5% over the past three years; debt/equity ratio of no higher than 40%; positive free cash flow; and inflation-adjusted earnings growth of at least 15% per year over the long term. For companies in the technology and medical industries, it also looks at the price/research ratio – the firm’s market cap divided by the amount it spends on research. The more research spending the better (since good research can lead to future profits), with a price/research ratio under 5% the best case. Fisher isn’t the only investment guru whose research has pointed to the PSR as a great tool. James O’Shaughnessy, another of the strategists upon whom I base my investment models, made the metric a key part of his top growth strategy in his 1996 classic, What Works on Wall Street . O’Shaughnessy found that a combination of a high relative strength over the past year (relative strength is the percentage of stocks in the market that a particular stock has outperformed) and a low price/sales ratio (under 1.5) was a dynamic combination that could identify hot growth stocks that were still cheap. As always, when using a quantitative screening model like my Fisher- or O’Shaughnessy-inspired models, you should invest in a basket of stocks to diversify away stock-specific risk. With that in mind, here are a handful of picks that these 2 approaches are high on right now. Sanderson Farms (NASDAQ: SAFM ) : Mississippi-based Sanderson, founded in 1947, is engaged in the production, processing, marketing and distribution of fresh and frozen chicken and other prepared food items. It employs more than 11,000 employees in operations spanning five states and 13 different cities, and is the third largest poultry producer in the United States. Sanderson ($2 billion market cap) has a growth/value combo that impresses my Fisher-based model, which likes its 31.7% long-term inflation-adjusted EPS growth rate and 0.7 price/sales ratio. The strategy also likes that Sanderson’s debt/equity ratio is less than 1%, and that it is producing nearly $5 in free cash per share. Thor Industries, Inc. (NYSE: THO ) : Thor ($3.2 billion market cap) manufactures and sells a wide variety of recreational vehicles throughout the US and Canada, including the Airstream line of campers and trailers. Its products include conventional travel trailers, fifth wheels and park models. In addition, it also produces truck and folding campers and equestrian and other specialty towable vehicles. Thor gets high marks from my Fisher-based model, in part because of its 0.76 PSR. The strategy also likes the RV-maker’s 17% long-term inflation-adjusted growth rate, lack of any long-term debt, and $2.78 in free cash per share. Foot Locker, Inc. (NYSE: FL ) : This specialty athletic retailer ($9 billion market cap) gets strong interest from my O’Shaughnessy-based model, which likes its 1.2 PSR. This approach also looks for firms that have upped earnings per share in each year of the past five-year period, which Foot Locker has done. And, as I mentioned above, it likes to see strong momentum behind its holdings, and Foot Locker’s 12-month relative strength of 72 fits the bill. Southwest Airlines Co. (NYSE: LUV ) : This one-time upstart has become a major player in the industry, taking in nearly $20 billion in annual revenues. The Dallas-based firm operates Southwest Airlines and AirTran Airways, and gets strong interest from my O’Shaughnessy-based model. A big reason: its 1.4 PSR. The strategy also likes its persistent earnings growth over the past five years and its solid 72 relative strength. Disclosure: I am/we are long SAFM, THO, FL, LUV. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.