Ask
yourself a simple question, Jean-Marie Eveillard says. "If Warren
Buffett is the second-richest man in the world, why aren't there more
professional value investors?"
An intriguing question indeed. "The answer is purely
psychological," he argues. "If you are a value investor, every now and
then you lag, or experience what consultants call tracking error. It
can be very painful. To be a value investor, you have to be willing to
suffer pain. Bill Ruane of Sequoia once said he thought only 5% of
professional investors were value investors."
Eveillard himself was more than two years into
retirement this past March and enjoying one of his frequent visits to
Paris when one Wednesday he received a call from his old firm, First
Eagle Funds, requesting that he report back to work the following
Monday. The sudden and abrupt resignation of Eveillard's successor,
Charles De Vaulx, a subject about which First Eagle remains acutely
sensitive, triggered the request, so the legendary manager accepted the
offer.
Until then, Eveillard had divided his time between
his home in New York City and a walk-up apartment he had purchased a
decade ago in Paris, from which he could make frequent visits to see
his nonagenarian mother, who lives on France's Atlantic coast, and
Bavaria, one of his favorite getaway spots. Teaching a course on value
investing at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business enabled
him to satisfy his intellectual curiosity, but Eveillard says his
retirement was less active than some might think.
"I traveled and lived quietly," he explains. "People
said you must be busy running your own personal portfolio, but I kept
most of my investments in the funds." While Eveillard frequently dined
with his old First Eagle colleagues and talked securities, he was
reticent about making suggestions to research various investments for
fear of creating the impression he was looking over their shoulders.
Since returning to portfolio management, Eveillard
has found himself confronted with a global economic boom running on all
cylinders, the likes of which has only surfaced at two junctures in the
past two decades-in 1987 and during the 1999-2000 period. For an
investor who has consistently looked for a margin of safety in every
security he has ever purchased, neither the strong economy nor the
robust level of equity markets is fazing him these days.
"I'm not worried about the global economic boom,
except that it's a credit boom. What worries me is that we've had a
credit boom for 15 years now, and a credit boom usually ends in a
credit bust," Eveillard says. "Already you see problems cropping up
like subprime debt. There are also indications that real estate is
peaking in Ireland and Spain and England, not just America. And the
appetite for risk remains high."
Three weeks after this interview, it emerged that 18
million mortgages in the United Kingdom were in arrears, indicating
that his concerns about the global real estate boom may be
well-founded. And financial markets that are priced for a perfect world
may eventually discover that world isn't quite as perfect as it
appears.
Most observers are quite sanguine about credit
conditions, and believe the subprime problems are isolated. Most big
banks boast strong balance sheets, they argue. Eveillard isn't
convinced. "A bank today is a black box. What does an outside money
manager know about their derivatives contracts and proprietary
trading?" he asks. "Some banks are disguised hedge funds. Yes, they
have good balance sheets because they've accumulated profits. But
remember in 1990, when banks like Citicorp were too big to fail? That
didn't protect equity holders."
One major change on the investment landscape Eveillard has found upon
his return after 30 months in retirement is the increasingly powerful
position of private equity investors and hedge funds. Both vehicles
have become the darlings of pension funds and endowments, and the
ever-skeptical global fund manager believes they will live to regret
it. "What is private equity? It is the use of leverage in a bull
market," he says. "What's a hedge fund? It's not an asset class, it's a
compensation scheme. If you bought a good mutual fund and leveraged it
four- or five-to-one, you'd have private equity or hedge fund-like
returns."
Yet Eveillard's own style of investing, which uses gold as an insurance
policy and sometimes seeks out arbitrages between complex securities
like convertible or junk bonds, bears similarities to both global macro
and absolute return investing, two popular styles in the hedge fund
universe. Following his superlative performance in 2002, when hedge
funds and First Eagle funds were about the only vehicles with positive
returns, hedge fund marketers were eager to talk to him. "They could
see pretty quickly it wouldn't work because their investors are often
very short-term-oriented; they are almost like day traders," he says.
"We don't want to use leverage because we are long-term investors and
it takes away your staying power. And when you short a security, you
cannot take market psychology out of the picture."
Psychology is a subject as near to Eveillard's total
investing philosophy as it is to his heart. Born in France in 1940, he
spent his formative post-war years moving from city to city, watching
the glacial pace of that country's reconstruction as his father was
constantly transferred as an official with the national railroad.
Even though he has lived in America for most of his professional life,
he remains more risk-averse than most U.S. money managers. After
graduating from Ecoles des Hautes Etudes Commerciales in 1962, he
started his career at Societe Generale, moving to the United States in
1968.
"Americans tend to be very optimistic about the future. Europeans tend
to be more skeptical and cynical," he explains. Over the years, many
U.S. money managers have told him they would love to be a value
manager. But somehow they don't have the discipline or patience in
America's frequently extended bull markets.
Eveillard acknowledges his
approach is different and perhaps paternalistic. During his 25 years
managing First Eagle Global fund, he suffered only two down years, with
losses of less than 2% in each of those years, and posted some of the
best risk-adjusted returns of any manager during that quarter century,
according to Morningstar. One of them was 1998, a year in which his
fund appeared on a Lemon List of funds to avoid.
Because Eveillard
declined to participate in tech mania, he lost half his shareholders in
the late 1990s. Today, he can laugh about it. But nine years ago when
many value investors were quitting the business, it wasn't so funny.
"It never pained me to watch good investors do better than me, but in
the late 1990s some people I thought were idiots did much better than
me," he recalls.
For a sophisticated professional investor, Eveillard shares a trait
common to many retail investors. He's not just risk-averse; he's also
loss-averse. "My first responsibility is to avoid losing money, at
least over the long term," he says, echoing Buffett's first rule of
investing. "Unlike hedge funds, mutual funds are dealing with the
savings of middle-class people. If I lose money, it could make life
more difficult for retirees and other people who need the money. That's
more important to me than looking stupid to your boss by owning Ford
and not Cisco."
The first three years of the new millennium were an extended nightmare
for the vast majority of investors, but they proved to be an extended
victory lap for Eveillard. From 2000 to 2002, his funds stayed in
positive territory. When the last go-go investors were capitulating in
the wake of the Enron-Worldcom corporate accounting crisis in 2002, his
global fund, boosted by heavy weightings in foreign stocks and gold,
posted a 10.2% gains.
In 2003, First Eagle Global fund enjoyed its best
year ever, returning 37.6%. Eveillard was busy loading up on depressed
stocks like Tyco and Vivendi, run by "that idiot [Jean-Marie] Messier."
Both Tyco and Vivendi produced big gains for First Eagle, though he
remembers hearing warnings from colleagues asking if he had lost his
mind or had stopped reading the newspapers, filled with headlines
detailing the companies' woes.
Today's global equity markets may not be exhibiting the same degree of
froth they were in other cross-continental booms in 1987 and 2000, but
other factors concern Eveillard. "One thing that worries me is we, the
mutual fund business, are not as well-prepared for an equity market
decline, because what was required in 2000 was a lack of exposure to
one group, technology," he says. "Today, every asset has gone up:
stocks, bonds, gold, real estate. All sorts of hedge funds and others
have an eclectic approach to trading assets. When they have a problem
with one asset, they liquidate another asset class."
For most of the 25 years Eveillard ran the First Eagle funds, he held a
sizeable position in gold that sometimes accounted for as much as 20%
of the portfolio. The dismal performance of gold during most of those
years, combined with his foreign equity exposure at a time when both
U.S. equity markets and the U.S. dollar often were strong, make his
S&P-beating performance all the more remarkable.
These days, however, gold accounts for only 5% of his holdings and
Eveillard is starting to question its efficacy as "an insurance
policy," particularly in light of its run-up in recent years. "I'm
beginning to worry that if equity markets went down, gold would go down
for a few months too,' he says. "The correlation between the two is
much higher."
Partly for that reason, he's holding 15% of his assets in cash these
days.
Valuations for financial assets, commodities and real estate all are
high, but Eveillard thinks equities, unlike real estate in several
nations, haven't quite reached bubble levels. However, the increasing
efficiency of most global markets is shrinking the number of investment
opportunities available. "Ten or 15 years ago there were major
inefficiencies in continental Europe," he says. "Today, there are far
fewer."
One major difference enhancing market efficiencies in America and
Europe is the growing role played by private equity firms. Before
investing in a company, Eveillard and his staff try to calculate what a
knowledgeable buyer would pay for the concern. "In the 1990s, you had
the Greenspan put," he explains, referring to the widespread belief
among investors that the Federal Reserve Board would cut interest rates
in the event of a serious stock market correction. "Today, you have the
Bernanke put and the private equity put."
Chuck de Lardemelle, the fund's associate portfolio manager who is
scheduled to succeed Eveillard when he starts working half-time in
April 2008, finds that private equity firms are becoming formidable
competitors for value investors, as they are often quick to pounce on
companies when their share start trading at significant discounts. The
result for the last two years is very few discounts. "When a private
equity firm takes us out of an investment, very often we are not happy
about the price," de Lardemelle says.
As funds that like to go where others fear to tread, it should come as
little surprise that two places the First Eagle funds have been
bolstering their positions are in U.S. newspaper stocks and Japanese
industrial companies. Over the last year, the fnuds have purchased
positions in both Dow Jones and The New York Times, two companies with
great franchises operating in suddenly difficult environments resulting
from the Internet-driven disintermediation of their basic business.
Moreover, both companies are controlled by family trusts, and their
managements have been criticized for mediocrity.
"If you look at what managements did before the environment became
hostile, they didn't do much with franchises they had and the stocks
and businesses still did well," Eveillard says. "Mediocre management
was more than compensated for by the quality of business."
Many managements like First Eagle funds because of their willingness to
take long-term positions in companies. Eveillard says he has sometimes
opposed the sale of a business, even at a significant premium, if he
believes it has the potential to sustain its growth rate for five or
ten more years. In other words, he sometimes sees exactly the same
business characteristics private equity firms see and doesn't want them
to hog it all for themselves. It's a position more respected mutual
fund companies, notably T. Rowe Price & Associates, are starting to
take as the private equity train moves into the express lane.
In the case of Dow Jones, the $60 a share offer by Rupert Murdoch's
News Corp. was far above what de Lardemelle estimates was its private
market value of between $45 and $48 a share. But given that Murdoch
sees it as a trophy asset and wants to use Dow Jones journalists, who
currently provide a major share of CNBC's content, for his
soon-to-launch Fox Business channel, he may be able to justify a price
that other buyers can't. As for The New York Times, de Lardemelle calls
it "a high-quality franchise that will last," one with room for
improvement in its operating margins.
The quest for value sometimes takes First Eagle into strange places,
including some of the great American growth names of the 1990s. Two of
its larger holdings are Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson. Microsoft
was purchased in the low $20s when DeVaulx was still running the fund.
"Value investors tend to prefer businesses that are not too difficult
to understand," Eveillard says.
The U.S. pharmaceutical business has fallen on hard times, and that's
the sort of development that catches Eveillard's interest. "Despite
huge R&D budgets, the pipelines haven't been there and they seem to
get caught up in dubious sales practices, like advertising
pharmaceuticals on TV," he says.
That said, he believes Johnson & Johnson's stock is very reasonably
priced. "It's a pharmaceutical business and a consumer business, and it
has a very good corporate culture," he maintains. Another drug company
that First Eagle holds a major position in is French giant
Sanofi-Aventis, which purportedly has an excellent pipeline, even
though the Food and Drug Administration recently shot down its obesity
drug, Accomplia, that is approved in Europe.
But screaming values are scarce these days. Once upon a time, Europe in
particular was filled with bargains galore. Another of First Eagle's
major positions is a Swiss holding company called Pargesa, which
typically owns substantial minority stakes in eight to 12 businesses
and occasionally plays a discreet role in the management of these
concerns. At the time Eveillard bought it, Pargesa was selling at a 40%
discount to the sum of its parts, many of which he believed were also
seriously undervalued. It seemed a rare opportunity to double down.
"I didn't see the point of the discounts, so I talked to a European
analyst who told me, 'Two years ago it was at a 20% discount, now it's
a 40% discount and next year it will be at a 50%.'" That was music to
his ears. Today the First Eagle funds own more than 7% of Pargesa.
There's only one area left in the developed world where the classic
Benjamin Graham-style values that Eveillard loves still exist. That's
in Japan, possibly 2007's worst stock market, and South Korea. "The
largest discounts we see are in Japan and South Korea, two nations
where private equity is not a presence," de Lardemelle says.
China's economy may be growing at a 10% annual rate for more than two
decades without a recession, an achievement many economists say has
never been reached in history, but Eveillard doesn't trust their
account-
ing. So markets like Japan, Korea and Singapore remain his favorite way
of playing the Chinese boom, as does an eclectic holding like
Remy-Cointreau, which is benefiting from China's love affair with Remy
Martin brandy.
One Japanese diamond in the rough is Keyence, which
makes sensors for factory automation. Since 1995, it has grown revenues
at a 14% annual clip and compounded revenues at a 17% rate, while
boasting 50% operating margins. Keyence sells at 26,000 yen a share and
has 6,000 yen a share in cash. "Net out the cash and it has a 50%
return on equity," Eveillard says. "We believe the business is worth
about 34,000 yen."
Another recent Japanese discovery is SMC, the world's largest producer
of pneumatic equipment, or complex valves. SMC, which does $3 billion
in revenues, competes against Parker-Hannifin, which has several other
major business lines, in the U.S. It sells at 15,000 yen a share, and
its cash is about 5,000 yen a share. While the stock is cheap,
Eveillard acknowledges it may be near the cyclical peak.
But then these
are times to keep one's powder dry and let some cash build. Eveillard
and de Lardemelle don't see equity valuations as absurd, just full and
maybe a little more generous than fair. Eveillard thinks most
investors' memories of the 2000-2002 bear market are still present,
albeit fading. "But give this bull market another six to 12 months" and
he suggests they may fade into dust.
Next March de Lardemelle will succeed Eveillard, who will work
half-time for the following 12 months and remain available for the next
three years. The challenge for First Eagle will keeping de Lardemelle
content in his role. Whatever the reason for De Vaulx's departure, it
wasn't his investment performance, which was excellent. Some think it
was simply the pressure of running $30 billion for shareholders
accustomed to sensational results.
That, of course, raises the issue of one key to successful value
investing-that most un-American of virtues, patience. "I think
investors everywhere in the world tend to be impatient," he says. "At
the end of every day, I look at my stocks that went up and wish I had
more and look at the ones that went down and wish I had less. It's
human nature. But you have to learn to wait for the fat pitch."