AQR Capital’s Cliff Asness: My Top Ten Peeves

Cliff Asness: My Top Ten Peeves

by ValueWalk StaffDecember 2, 2013

Saying I have a pet peeve, or some pet peeves, just doesn’t do it. I have a menagerie of peeves, a veritable zoo of them. Luckily for readers, I will restrict this editorial to only those related to investing (you do not want to see the more inclusive list) and to only a mere 10 at that. The following are things said or done in our industry or said about our industry that have bugged me for years. Because of the machinegun nature of this piece, these are mostly teasers. I don’t go into all the arguments for my points, and I blatantly ignore counterpoints (to which I assert without evidence that I have countercounterpoints). Some of these are simple, so perhaps the teaser suffices. But some deserve a more thorough treatment that hopefully I, or someone else, will undertake. Some are minor, truly deserving the title “peeve,” and some, more weighty. In each case, as befits an opinion piece, it’s not just my discussion of the peeve but the very prevalence of the peeve itself that is my opinion. I do not extensively cite sources for them. I contend that they are rather widespread throughout the land of financial media, pundits, advisers, and managers. Thus, citing one or two sources would be unfair, and citing them all, impossible. Therefore, please feel free to disagree not just with my discussion of the peeves but also about their very existence! Without further ado, here is a list of things held together by only three characteristics: (1) They are about investing or finance in general, (2) I believe they are commonly held and often repeated beliefs, and (3) I think they are wrong or misleading and they hurt investors.

Is a Peanut Butter Pop-Tart Innovation? Kellogg’s CEO Calls It That, but Is He Right?

Is a Peanut Butter Pop-Tart Innovation?

Kellogg’s CEO Calls It That, but Is He Right?

DENNIS K. BERMAN

Dec. 3, 2013 8:22 p.m. ET

It measures nearly three inches by five inches, and it’s made from enriched flour, corn syrup and creamy peanut butter. This is Kellogg‘s K +0.89% Gone Nutty! peanut butter Pop-Tart. If you agree with Kellogg CEO John Bryant, it’s one of the cereal company’s important products of 2013. He went so far as to call it an innovation. Listen to the chiefs of America’s biggest companies, and you’ll find the Gone Nutty! Pop-Tart has plenty of company. Most CEOs now spray the word “innovation” as if it were an air freshener. A little spritz can’t hurt. A little spritz can’t hurt. Read more of this post

The One Thing That Truly Motivates Creative Talent–And How To Foster It

THE ONE THING THAT TRULY MOTIVATES CREATIVE TALENT–AND HOW TO FOSTER IT

BY DEBORAH MORRISON

Educator and author Deborah Morrison talks inner mojo and the simple, yet critical stuff of wanting to be good. Talent. It’s the subject line of many an inbox message these days. All of us who belong to the great ecosystem of new talent development–universities, portfolio programs, thinktanks, agencies–and agency leaders, mentors, recruiters and talent managers, offer opinions about who we need now and how we train them. Even better, the discussion has evolved to the nurturing of talent over the long ride of a career. Read more of this post

(Bad) strategy is everything, in innovating

(Bad) strategy is everything, in innovating

“Business as usual” is no longer a luxury a company can afford. More and more, companies are seeing that their revenue growth cannot outpace the increase in cost, resulting in decreasing profitability year-on-year.

BY JANSON YAP –

4 HOURS 54 MIN AGO

“Business as usual” is no longer a luxury a company can afford. More and more, companies are seeing that their revenue growth cannot outpace the increase in cost, resulting in decreasing profitability year-on-year. With the fast-changing competitive ecosystem, brought about in part by technology and knowledge advancement, business leaders are recognising the urgent need to revisit their strategy. Innovation is a critical piece of that strategy — but many times, normally rational business people allow themselves to be blinded by the notion that innovation is unlike any other aspect of business and, therefore, does not follow the normal rules of corporate strategy. Read more of this post

The Secrets Inside Us: The human body is less well understood than we think

December 3, 2013

The Secrets Inside Us

By BILL HAYES

WHEN the news broke recently that a team of Belgian scientists had “discovered” a new body part — a ligament located just outside the knee — the first place my mind went was to Padua. Padua is the small city in northern Italy where the 16th-century Brussels-born scientist Andreas Vesalius taught anatomy and created his history-making masterpiece, “De Humani Corporis Fabrica” (“On the Fabric of the Human Body”), published in 1543. The old man would have been delighted by the news, I couldn’t help thinking. Read more of this post

The Science of Great Ideas – How to Train Your Creative Brain

THE SCIENCE OF GREAT IDEAS–HOW TO TRAIN YOUR CREATIVE BRAIN

CREATIVITY IS A MYSTERY RIGHT? MAYBE NOT. HERE’S A LOOK AT THE SCIENCE OF THE CREATIVE PROCESS AND HOW TO HARNESS YOUR BRAIN’S POWER TO COME UP WITH MORE GREAT IDEAS.

BY BELLE BETH COOPER

Ah, ideas. Who doesn’t want more great ideas? I know I do. I usually think about ideas as being magical and hard to produce. I expect them to just show up without me cultivating them, and I often get frustrated when they don’t show up when I need them. The good news is that it turns out cultivating ideas is a process, and one that we can practice to produce more (and hopefully better) ideas. On the other hand, often timesgreat ideas can also just come to us whilst in the shower or in another relaxing environment. Read more of this post

The Reinvention of an Industrial Titan: DuPont is again remaking itself, with a shifting R&D strategy and a pile of acquisitions and divestitures. The CFO gives his take on the transformation.

November 22, 2013

The Reinvention of an Industrial Titan

DuPont is again remaking itself, with a shifting R&D strategy and a pile of acquisitions and divestitures. The CFO gives his take on the transformation.

David McCann

The quaintly named E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company was founded in 1802 as a gunpowder manufacturer. That remained its main product until late in that century, when it delved into dynamite and nitroglycerin. (The company later upped the explosive ante considerably by helping along The Manhattan Project and production of the first atomic bombs.) For most of the past century, DuPont remained a U.S. industrial titan even while entering and exiting a dizzying array of businesses. It’s arguable that no major American company has reinvented itself as many times as DuPont has. Read more of this post

Steve Case: Don’t let the United States turn into Detroit

Steve Case: Don’t let the United States turn into Detroit

By Matt McFarland, Updated: December 3 at 12:05 pm

AOL co-founder Steve Case stressed the need for the United States to remain innovative Tuesday at an event hosted by the Aspen Institute in Washington. “We kind of led on the digital information revolution. We need to lead in the next revolution, otherwise our economy will start stagnating and we’ll never be able to solve some of the fiscal problems,” Case said. Read more of this post

Paul Crouch dies at 79; founder of the Trinity Broadcasting Network, the world’s largest Christian television system.

Paul Crouch dies at 79; founder of the Trinity Broadcasting Network

By Elaine Woo, Tuesday, December 3, 9:02 AM

In the mid-1970s, a vision came to Paul Crouch, but it wasn’t what a man of the cloth might have expected. A map of North America appeared on his ceiling, glowing with pencil-thin beams of light that shot in every direction. “Lord,” asked Mr. Crouch, a Pentecostal minister, “what does this mean?” God, according to Mr. Crouch, had one word for him: “Satellite.” Read more of this post

Copycat biotech drugs slow to take off in Europe

Copycat biotech drugs slow to take off in Europe

1:00am EST

By Ben Hirschler

LONDON (Reuters) – Despite austerity-driven cuts across European healthcare systems, most countries have been slow to embrace a new class of medicines that could save them billions of euros – copies of biotech treatments. These cheaper versions of expensive biotech drugs, known as biosimilars, could slash the cost of treating diseases like cancer and rheumatoid arthritis in the same way that generics have curbed spending on traditional medicines. Read more of this post

Shell to GE Lured by Gas-Fueled Ships on Record Supply

Shell to GE Lured by Gas-Fueled Ships on Record Supply

Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA), General Electric Co. (GE) and a company co-founded by T. Boone Pickens are planning investments in natural-gas-powered shipping as record U.S. output spurs the merchant fleet to use a new fuel. Clean Energy Fuels Corp., which Pickens helped start, will begin construction next year on the country’s first fuel station for cargo ships running on liquefied natural gas in Jacksonville, Florida. Shell said in March it’s planning LNG plants for the Great Lakes and Gulf Coast. GE, evaluating five locations, says the U.S. will need 50 to 100 small-scale plants for ships, trains, mining and trucks by 2025, each costing $50 million to $150 million. Read more of this post

OPEC Inaction Masks Looming Supply Glut in 2014: Energy Markets

OPEC Inaction Masks Looming Supply Glut in 2014: Energy Markets

Even with OPEC forecast to keep its output quota unchanged at a meeting this week, falling oil demand and prospects for increased supply from some member states mean the group’s leader, Saudi Arabia, will have to cut production anyway. The kingdom and its allies Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates will need to produce about 2 million barrels a day less in 2014 to prevent a glut, the Centre for Global Energy Studies predicts. That’s equal to annual revenue of about $80 billion at today’s prices. The 12-nation group meets in Vienna on Dec. 4 and will reaffirm its collective limit of 30 million barrels a day, according to 22 of 24 analysts and traders surveyed by Bloomberg News. Read more of this post

In Fracking, Sand Is the New Gold; Energy Boom Fuels Demand for Key Ingredient Used in Drilling Wells; 100 Sand Mines in Wisconsin

In Fracking, Sand Is the New Gold

Energy Boom Fuels Demand for Key Ingredient Used in Drilling Wells; 100 Sand Mines in Wisconsin

ALISON SIDER and KRISTIN JONES

Dec. 2, 2013 7:49 p.m. ET

The race to drill for oil in the U.S. is creating another boom—in sand, a key ingredient in fracking. Energy companies are expected to use 56.3 billion pounds of sand this year, blasting it down oil and natural gas wells to help crack rocks and allow fuel to flow out. Sand use has increased 25% since 2011, according to the consulting firm PacWest, which expects a further 20% rise over the next two years. Read more of this post

Versace Valuation May Be as Over the Top as Its Clothes

DECEMBER 3, 2013, 2:09 PM

Versace Valuation May Be as Over the Top as Its Clothes

By QUENTIN WEBB

Versace’s valuation looks as aggressive as its outfits. The Italian fashion house, which is sizing up buyout firms and sovereign wealth funds to finance a capital increase, believes it is worth more than 1 billion euros, or $1.36 billion, and could triple in value in three years. There is real potential, because Versace has fallen behind industry trends. But a big price tag for a skimpy minority stake next to a powerful family? That’s hard to pull off. Read more of this post

Heavy Inventories Threaten to Squeeze Clothing Stores

Heavy Inventories Threaten to Squeeze Clothing Stores

Retailers’ Weak Thanksgiving Showing Could Force Tough Markdowns

SUZANNE KAPNER

Dec. 3, 2013 9:58 p.m. ET

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It isn’t just Americans who need to go on a diet after Thanksgiving. Apparel retailers need to slim down, too. Chains including Abercrombie & Fitch Co. ANF +5.79% , Chico’s FAS Inc., Gap Inc.GPS -1.13% and Victoria’s Secret came into the fourth quarter with heavy inventory loads. The concern now is the retail industry’s weak showing over Thanksgiving weekend will force them to take bigger markdowns that could hurt their fourth-quarter profits. Read more of this post

Adidas chief admits mistakes have taken toll

December 3, 2013 1:29 pm

Adidas chief admits mistakes have taken toll

By Alice Ross in Frankfurt

The chief executive of Adidas has admitted that the German sports equipment company has made mistakes and not performed as well as senior executives had hoped. Speaking to investors at its Bavarian headquarters in Herzogenaurach, Herbert Hainer, head of the world’s second-largest sportswear company by sales, said that the environment “had served up a constant stream of challenges”, including cost pressures, currency swings and a “persistently weaker” European market. Read more of this post

Worst Raw-Material Slump Since ’08 Seen Deepening

Worst Raw-Material Slump Since ’08 Seen Deepening

By Elizabeth Campbell  Dec 2, 2013

The commodity slump that spurred bear markets in everything from gold to corn to sugar this year will deepen by the end of December as prices head for their first annual loss since 2008, if history is any guide. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24 raw materials fell in December 83 percent of the time since 1971 when the benchmark gauge was posting losses for the year through November, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The average December loss was 3.9 percent, which if it happened this time would mean a 7.8 percent drop for the year. Read more of this post

Raw Sugar Extends Longest Slump Since August 2012 on Supply Glut

Sugar Reaches Three-Year Low as Indian Dispute Ends; Cocoa Drops

Sugar fell to a three-year low in London on speculation exports from India will speed up after the end of a cane-price dispute that delayed processing in the world’s second-biggest producer. Cocoa retreated in London. All mills in Uttar Pradesh state will start processing cane by Dec. 12 after ending a shutdown, C.B. Patodia, president of Uttar Pradesh Sugar Mills Association, said in an interview yesterday. India is returning to the export market and may ship out as much as 3 million metric tons of sugar, Abinash Verma, director general of the Indian Sugar Mills Association, said in an interview in London last week. Read more of this post

Commodity trackers flee for surging stocks

December 4, 2013 8:59 am

Commodity trackers flee for surging stocks

By Gregory Meyer in New York

Index-tracking commodity investors are fleeing the strategy at a record pace as surging stock markets leave raw materials in the dust. New estimates from Citi show $36bn was redeemed from passive commodities investments in the year to November, a “massive retrenchment” from net inflows of $27.5bn in all of 2012. Read more of this post

China Startups Focus on Pay-to-Gain

Dec 4, 2013

China Startups Focus on Pay-to-Gain

With a bevy of Internet companies that have grown successful on clones of Western products from YouTube to FacebookFB -0.70%, the Chinese Internet industry has long been maligned–often unfairly—as a domain of copycats. Though in some cases that has been true, the emphasis on the products put out by some of China’s largest Internet companies has obscured another area where Chinese companies have for years been pushing the boundaries: The ways they make money online. Read more of this post

Tingyi Considers Food Deals With $1.6 Billion War Chest

Tingyi Considers Food Acquisitions With $1.6 Billion War Chest

Tingyi (Cayman Islands) Holding Corp. (322), PepsiCo Inc.’s Chinese partner, is considering buying instant food businesses to boost growth after annual sales expanded at the slowest pace in eight years. The maker of Master Kong brand ready-to-drink teas and snacks is seeking acquisitions, and will likely form a new strategic alliance next year, Chief Financial Officer Frank Lin said in an interview in Taipei on Nov. 29, declining to provide details. It’s considering both domestic and overseas brands for deals and cooperations, he said. Read more of this post

Robin Li Passes Wang Jianlin as China’s Wealthiest Man

Robin Li Passes Wang Jianlin as China’s Wealthiest Man

Robin Li passed Wang Jianlin as the richest man in China today by just $64 million, according to the Bloomberg Billionaire Index.

The founder of China’s largest Internet search engine Baidu Inc., has become the wealthiest individual in the world’s second-biggest economy, 14 days after he took the No. 2 spot. Li’s net worth has climbed by $4.8 billion, or 65 percent, to $12.231 billion so far this year as Baidu shares rallied. Wang, chairman of closely-held Dalian Wanda Group, has seen his fortune rise by $2.9 billion to $12.167 billion in 2013. Four of China’s top billionaires are worth about $12 billion. Read more of this post

Inside China’s Version of Silicon Valley; Entrepreneurs, Investors Rub Elbows in Beijing’s Zhongguancun District

Inside China’s Version of Silicon Valley

Entrepreneurs, Investors Rub Elbows in Beijing’s Zhongguancun District

PAUL MOZUR

Updated Dec. 3, 2013 8:11 p.m. ET

BEIJING—On the outside, China’s answer to Silicon Valley doesn’t look the part: It’s a crowded mass of electronics malls, fast-food joints and office buildings in northwest Beijing, bisected by congested highways. But in these nondescript offices China is nurturing a growing class of tech entrepreneurs and venture capitalists, whose promising startups are challenging the long-held idea that China’s Internet companies merely copy the products of the West. Read more of this post

Disney rethinks its China strategy

December 2, 2013 4:00 pm

Disney rethinks its China strategy

By Howard Yu and Stefan Michel

The story. When China lifted a ban on Walt Disney characters in 1978 and joined the World Trade Organisation in 2001, the US entertainment company saw a huge potential new market for sales and distribution of film, television content and DVDs in an increasingly liberalising economy. Read more of this post

China’s Top 100 Brands: Private Companies Gaining Ground

Dec 3, 2013

China’s Top 100 Brands: Private Companies Gaining Ground

China Mobile ranked as the country’s No. 1 brand in 2013, according to research from Millward Brown and WPP. China’s homegrown private brands are gaining ground against their state-backed peers, reflecting progress, experts say, in the country’s push to rebalance the economy. Read more of this post

China’s Latest IPO Investment: Death

Dec 2, 2013

China’s Latest IPO Investment: Death

ISABELLA STEGER

If childbirth was the investment theme for November in China, then this month investors will have the chance to invest in something quite the opposite — a funeral services provider. Shanghai-based Fu Shou Yuan Group Ltd. is set to become the first such company in the country to go public. The biggest operator of cemeteries and provider of funeral services in China is looking to raise around $200 million in an initial public offering in Hong Kong, a person with knowledge of the matter said Tuesday. Read more of this post

A Profitable Trade: Illicitly Shipping BMWs to China; Lucrative Re-Sales of Luxury Cars Targeted by Federal U.S. Investigators

A Profitable Trade: Illicitly Shipping BMWs to China

Lucrative Re-Sales of Luxury Cars Targeted by Federal U.S. Investigators

ANDREW GROSSMAN

Dec. 2, 2013 6:57 p.m. ET

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In the U.S., the sticker price for a BMW BMW.XE -1.77% X5 sport-utility vehicle is just over $56,000. In China, BMW advertises the same car for nearly three times that, creating an opening for arbitragers to buy the vehicles in the U.S. and ship them to China for a quick profit. Read more of this post

Uncovering the market’s hidden blue chip stocks in Australia

Uncovering the market’s hidden blue chip stocks

December 4, 2013 – 2:20PM

Most investors know Woolworths and Commonwealth Bank of Australia are some of the most reliable earners listed on the ASX. That’s a big reason why they are considered the bluest of blue-chip stocks. But if a steady earnings profile makes a blue-chip stock, then the list would extend beyond the top 50 to include other names – some better known than others – such as Carsales.com, Mermaid Marine, Silver Chef and Corporate Travel Management. What most investors want when they buy shares in a company is exposure to a business that’s on a firm financial footing, a history of steady earnings growth, and decent prospects – all at a reasonable price. Sounds simple, really – except we all know it’s not. But we’ve tried to make things a little bit easier for you by measuring the stability of earnings, operating income and dividends paid of each and every one of the biggest 300 listed companies by market capitalisation, to come up with a short list of the businesses that have had the steadiest earnings profile over the past 10 years.

art-13stocks-620x349 Read more of this post

Shareholder Activism Rises Down Under; The Most Recent Target Is Seen as a Test of Activism Efficacy for Larger Companies

Shareholder Activism Rises Down Under

The Most Recent Target Is Seen as a Test of Activism Efficacy for Larger Companies

ROSS KELLY

Dec. 2, 2013 6:35 a.m. ET

Shareholder activism, made popular in the U.S. by the likes of Carl Icahn and Dan Loeb, is taking root in Australia as investors bristle over years of poor returns and conservative capital management. Washington H. Soul Pattinson SOL.AU -1.03% & Co., Australia’s second-oldest listed company, is the latest to find itself in the cross hairs of investors who think management isn’t doing enough to generate value. In October, the 110-year-old company, which has interests in businesses ranging from pharmaceutical retailing to coal mining, became the subject of an assault by two of its largest shareholders: Australian fund manager PerpetualLtd. PPT.AU -1.21% and investment banker Mark Carnegie. Read more of this post

Australia Food-Bowl Dream Seen at Risk as Foreign Cash Shunned

Australia Food-Bowl Dream Seen at Risk as Foreign Cash Shunned

Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s election pledge to turn Australia’s remote north into a food bowl for Asia has set him on a collision course with his own government over foreign ownership of agricultural land. Local farmers and officials have warned Abbott’s vision for the sparsely populated region will fail unless he allows greater investment from countries such as China and Indonesia. The government’s decision last week to block a U.S.-led $2 billion purchase of crop handler GrainCorp Ltd. has put a cloud over Abbott’s vow after his Sept. 7 election win that Australia is “open for business.” Read more of this post