Stock Screening With Walter Schloss
by Cara Scatizzi
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Many individual investors may not be familiar with the investment guru that Warren Buffett calls a super investor. Walter J. Schloss studied under Ben Graham in 1935 and started his own fund in 1955. Schloss son joined the fund in 1973 and subsequently renamed it Walter & Edwin Schloss Associates. During the 1956 to 2000 period, the fund earned a compounded annual rate of return of 15.7%, compared to the markets return of 11.2% annually over the same period.
Walter Schloss did not go to college and got his start doing clerical work for the financial firm Loeb Rhoades. He was encouraged to read Ben Grahams famous Security Analysis book and took two courses taught by Graham.
In 2001, Walters son Edwin could not find any cheap stocks to buy, so the two closed the fund. Deciding the market was overvalued would prove to be a prudent move. Walter Schloss is now retired, but much can be gleaned from his investing philosophy and style.
During a video conference with a number of analysts, Schloss summed up his investing style by saying, I would rather buy the things the way they are, rather than the way you think they may be at a later date.
Adam Smith wrote about Schloss in his 1972 book Supermoney and said, He has no connections or access to useful information
He looks up the numbers in the manuals and sends for the annual reports.
In addition to reading financial reports from the company, he subscribed to Value Line and used its investment research tools and reports to make buy and sell decisions.
Warren Buffett highlighted Schloss investing style in an article written for the Columbia Business School Magazine called The Superinvestors of Graham-and-Doddsville. Buffett said that Schloss doesnt worry about whether its January
whether its Monday
whether its an election year. He simply says if a business is worth a dollar and I can buy it for 40 cents, something good may happen.
A disciple of Graham and his value investing technique, Schloss looked for stocks that were hitting new lows and those trading at a price lower than their book value per share. Schloss looked for companies having temporary problems, as these might be selling at a discount to their actual value. He avoided companies with debt and preferred that management own a solid portion of its own stock. He also liked stocks with a long history (10 years or more) and avoided investing in foreign companies.
Schloss favored companies with a long history and those he considered stable and well known. He preferred to invest in businesses he understood, and, in the same vein, he avoided new industries he knew little about and foreign stocks. He felt the financial statements and valuation ratios of foreign firms were hard to compare with companies in the U.S. because many used different reporting and accounting techniques.
Schloss liked managers to have a stake in the company. He felt that their interests were better aligned with investors if they had money on the line.
He also never spoke with company managers because he felt that it clouded his judgment and that management was not always truthful when talking with investors. He preferred to make decisions based on his own analysis of a companys reported financial statements.
Schloss wouldnt buy a stock simply because it hit a new low, but he did use this as an initial screening criteria to find potentially undervalued stocks. He believed that a stocks price can fall to a new low either because the company is not being managed properly and its actual value has declined or because it is on sale and selling for a lower price than it is actually worth.
Schloss looked at book value per share to determine if a stock was underpriced or fairly priced. Book value is the fair value of a companys assets that, theoretically, shareholders would receive if the company were liquidated (meaning it sold all of its assets and paid all of its debt). Value investors compare this number to the stocks current price to determine if the stock is overvalued or undervalued.
To calculate book value, you simply subtract the companys liabilities from its assets. Dividing the result by the number of shares outstanding, gives you the book value per share. Schloss looked for companies whose current stock price was below its book value per share.
In general, Schloss preferred stocks to bonds because of their growth potential. He also limited his holdings to 20% in one stock. At any given time, he would hold up to 100 different stocks in his portfolio. He weighted the stocks based on their perceived values, putting less money in positions he was less sure about.
Schloss used limit orders to purchase stocks, deciding on the price he was willing to pay.
Schloss admitted that deciding when to sell a stock was difficult. He would try to get a 50% profit from holdings before selling. He would sometimes watch a stock continue to rise after selling it, but he tried to keep emotions out of the decisions by using simple rules to make sell decisions.
If a stocks price was falling and the companys fundamentals were sound, Schloss would buy more.
Unlike many financial gurus, Schloss never laid out his investment ideas specifically. Through reviewing various interviews with Schloss and observations about his approach from Wall Street insiders, we created a number of criteria that encompass his investing beliefs and ideas.
Table 1 discusses how you can use Schloss philosophy in a stock screening program, while Table 2 lists the exact screening criteria as used in AAIIs fundamental stock screening and research database program, Stock Investor Pro.
Exclude ADRs
Exclude Financial Stocks
Long Price History
Price Less Than Book Value per Share
Price Near 52-Week Low
Insider Ownership
Debt
First, we excluded over-the-counter stocks as well as ADRs. Over-the-counter stocks are not traded on a stock exchange because they do not meet the requirements and do not have to follow the same financial statement filing rules as stocks listed on the NYSE, NASDAQ or American stock exchanges. Schloss also preferred U.S. companies. ADRsAmerican depositary receiptsare shares issued by a U.S. bank in place of the foreign shares of a company held in trust by that bank, and they are traded on the U.S. exchanges.
Schloss did not explicitly exclude any sector in his portfolio; however, because he uses the price-to-book-value ratio to evaluate companies, we decided to exclude the financial sector. Typically, banks hold very large amounts of debt, a key component in the book value calculation. Essentially, the book value should tell you how much the company is worth after it pays all of its debt. For companies with high debt levels or sustained losses, such as financial firms, this number can be meaningless.
For example, during 2008 and 2009, banks have been writing down much of their debts. It is hard to know how much of the debt still on the books will be affected by future write downs as banks begin to reevaluate the value of so-called toxic assets (assets with a current market value much lower than their original value).
Finally, Schloss liked to invest in companies that have at least a 10-year history. However, with todays screening programs and Web sites, you may not be able to specify such a requirement going that far back.
A company whose stock price is reaching or close to a new low can represent a bargain. For example, a strong company in the oil and gas sector might see its share price pulled down when another player in that sector makes a negative announcement. Additionally, a companys share price can be affected by an overreaction to its own negative news.
Keep in mind that some stocks might be fairly valued at a very low price. It is essential to determine if the stocks price has fallen due to a fundamental shift in the companys finances or its business, or because it has been a victim of overall sector or market weakness. This is why it is important to look at various criteria in tandem when making investment decisions.
If a companys stock price is at or near a new low and its price is less than its book value per share, it might have been dragged down by factors other than its own financial strength.
When the price per share is below the book value per share, value investors see a bargain. Book value represents a companys liquidation value and the share price reflects the current market value. When the share price is less than book value per share, you are paying less per share to buy the stock than you would receive (per share) if the company liquidated all of its assets and paid off its debt.
The companies that Schloss liked had no long-term debt. Long-term debt is money the company owes but does not expect to pay off in the upcoming year. Companies with little or no debt have more cash on hand to meet current obligations as well as to invest in future expansion and growth.
This criterion makes it hard for certain types of firms to pass the screensuch as young companies and financial institutions, which typically carry large amounts of debt.
Finally, Schloss wanted a companys managers and decision makers to hold shares in the company. He felt this aligned their motives with shareholders. One indicator of whether company management thinks the current stock price is over- or undervalued is the number of shares bought and sold by insiders. Typically, if insiders are buying a lot of shares, this sends the signal that they believe the stock is undervalued at the current price. The reverse cannot always be said when insiders are selling shares. Sometimes, insiders sell shares in order to diversify or reallocate holdings in their personal portfolios.
Table 3 shows a list of companies meeting all of the screen criteria as of March 31, 2009. The data comes from AAIIs fundamental stock screening program, Stock Investor Pro.
The six stocks that pass the Schloss screen criteria are wide ranging in industry, market capitalization (from $3.4 million to $43.2 million), insider ownership (as little as 18.8% to as high as 65.6%) and even book value per share (2.93 to 13.31).
While earnings and sales growth are not part of the Schloss philosophy, it is interesting to see that over the last five years, most of the companies have seen negative growth in earnings per share and three have seen a negative growth in sales.
Finally, the relative strength index measures the stocks performance as compared to the S&P 500. Each stock has underperformed the S&P 500 significantly.
Lets look at one stock in particular: Avid Technology, which develops software to create graphics and special effects for films and advertisements. Avid operates in a fast-changing market sector and uses acquisitions to gain market share and introduce new products. The company was once a stronghold in the video-editing market. However, botched product upgrades, expensive software and new applications that were less than user-friendly opened the door for the competition, including Applewho swooped in and convinced customers that their products were better. The loss of market share drove down sales and earnings per share.
On the other hand, Avid has shown progress in improving its products and still offers a low-cost alternative that is popular with students and low-budget filmmakers. In the future, Apple will continue to be a threat and Avid will need constant innovation to win back its lost share.
This simple example illustrates that you must research a company in depth before buying a stock to be sure you fully understand why it meets certain criteria. Will Avids stock price rebound as it works out the kinks, upgrades its offerings and acquires companies? Or is Apples fierce competition too much for Avid to handle? Only time will tell, but Schloss made decisions on these types of stocks daily to build a successful portfolio.
Table 4 lists the median data points on a number of statistics for the Schloss passing companies as a whole, all exchange-listed stocks and the stocks in the S&P 500. The median price for Schloss stocks is very close to the median 52-week low, only 8.0% above the low. Compare this to all exchange-traded stocks, whose current median price is 47% higher than the median 52-week low, and S&P 500 stocks at 34% higher.
The Schloss stocks also have a much lower median book value per share than S&P 500 stocks (6.65 versus 13.36) and a much higher insider ownership percentage than both exchange-listed and S&P 500 stocks (35.1% compared to 9.3% and 1.0%, respectively).
The stocks passing the Schloss screen are very small, as measured by market capitalization. The median market cap for the current set of passing companies is only $19.1 million, placing them in the nano-cap range. Even the typical exchange-listed stock has a market cap of over $200 million. Such small firms require extra attention before you buy themspecifically, to liquidity (daily trading volume) and bid-ask spreads.
As seen in Table 3, most of the companies passing the Schloss screen have negative or very low long-term growth rates in earnings per share and sales. While one might argue that some of this can be attributed to the current investing environment and that many solid companies are seeing declines in sales and earnings, the numbers tell a different story.
In fact, Table 4 shows that the long term growth rates for earnings and sales are much lower for the Schloss stocks compared to exchange-traded and S&P 500 stocks. Over the last five years, the Schloss stocks have seen negative growth in earnings per share (11.1%) and very small growth in sales (2.7%). Compare this to all exchange-listed stocks, which have seen 4.7% growth in earnings and 12.7% in sales. Similarly, S&P 500 stocks have grown earnings 11.1% and sales 10.1% in the past five years.
The Schloss technique is effective in finding smaller stocks with very low price-to-book-value ratios, prices near a 52-week low and a much higher level of insider ownership when compared to exchange-listed stocks and stocks in the S&P 500.
However, as we have shown, the size of these companies coupled with their historical revenue and earnings performances require a good amount of patience from investors. Schloss was a successful investor because he laid out criteria, studied the facts, ignored emotion and rosy management forecasts, and knew when it was time to sell. He showed that the key to any successful stock screening strategy is additional research. Blindly buying stocks that meet a small number of criteria does not equal great performance.
A stock can be cheap for a number of reasons. It is up to investors to discover the reasons and invest based on solid research and analysis of the companys financial state.
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