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SOCIAL TOPICS (Archive):
INVESTMENT & ECONOMIC ANALYSIS Beyond the Next Quarter
Published, Summer 2004
I’ve heard it many times: Social investors may have their hearts in the right
place, but that’s a poor starting place for making money in the stock market.
Conventional investors do better. They look at the cold facts of profit and loss
and aren’t distracted by sentimentality.
I beg to differ. Here’s an outrageous claim: Social investors are better
equipped than most to grasp the importance of the creation of long term value,
the only thing that drives sustainable investment returns.
You don’t have to cite the proponents of social investing to understand just
how self-defeating some of the tactics of mainstream (a.k.a. Wall Street)
investors have been. Warren Buffet, regarded by many as America’s premier
investor, shares our impatience with the standard approach, finding that Wall
Street’s advice is simply not worth the time (“We never look at any analysts’
reports…I don’t understand why people do it.”). Buffet further complains that
when “managers dance to Wall Street’s tune,” as many do, they wind up following
“operating and capital allocation policies far different from those they would
choose if left to themselves.” A terrific recent book by New York Times
reporter, Alex Berenson, makes a similar case. He attributes the market debacle
of recent years to the obsessive primacy Wall Street analysts placed on the
so-called “Number”—the earnings per share figure reported to Wall Street which,
purportedly, encapsulated all one needed to know about a company’s
profitability. Berenson reviews in exquisite detail Wall Street’s narrow and
short term focus, how this impelled managers to make foolish business decisions,
and how this self-reinforcing cycle often temporarily led to skyrocketing stock
prices. We know, of course, how this all ended: Companies that damaged their own
futures and investors with plenty of losses to show for following conventional
wisdom.
How then, do I support my claim that social investors are better equipped to
be successful? By pointing to my conviction that successful investors are more
inclined to worry about the health of the entities they own rather than whether
or not a quarterly earnings report pleases Wall Street. True, that inclination
may often be motivated by a social or ethical concern, or the interests of a
broader group of stakeholders, but it provides the proper starting point for
identifying long term value. Think about some of the value destroying things
that some companies have done that Wall Street frequently ignores (or even
applauds) if it helps bolster short term profits: scaling back employee health
benefits, reducing research and development, treating environmental risks
cavalierly, borrowing more funds than otherwise prudent to sustain a faltering
project or enable repurchase of pricey shares.
Consider this contrasting example from our own experience. Costco, the
warehouse retailer, and long term Walden holding, recently saw its stock decline
briefly but sharply when one analyst criticized the company, subsequent to a
quarterly earnings shortfall, for providing workers a best in industry package
of wages and benefits. Of course, high labor costs did limit recent earnings,
but investors with a broader, longer term perspective understood that Costco’s
industry-leading past success and future prospects had been built on a low
turnover, well motivated workforce. It is no surprise that Costco has a sensible
executive compensation policy as well.
Even big technology companies, once Wall Street favorites, sometimes fail to
get sufficient credit from conventional investors for conserving shareholder
value. Intel, for instance, has made a point of addressing the adverse
environmental effects that are inherent in semiconductor manufacturing. Given
the volatility of the company’s earnings, and the obsession Wall Street holds
for forecasting to the penny each quarter’s report, most investors probably
don’t pay much attention to such a long term concern. But we think Intel is
among a growing group of companies that is protecting shareholder value in this
area, something that may prove vastly more important than next quarter’s
earnings report. Perhaps it is just a coincidence, but Intel’s management has a
similar long term focus in its employment practices. The company is regularly
included in Fortune’s list of “100 Best Companies to Work For.”
Of course, I know that it would be foolish to push my “outrageous claim” of
the superior talents of social investors too far. Statisticians can argue about
performance results, but I suspect that the issues are far too murky to be
settled conclusively. And, no doubt, attentiveness to the creation of long term
value is not the exclusive preserve of social investors. Still, I feel confident
learning from the analysis of a social investor who starts by asking questions
about the vibrancy and sturdiness of the organization under consideration for an
ownership stake. If instead the first question asked is, “Will this company beat
the Wall Street earnings forecast next quarter?” I think it’s time to put my
profit seeking cash back in my pocket. —Bill Apfel
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