Warren Buffett and the art of stock arbitrage Proven strategies for arbitrage and other special investment situations

Mary Buffett

Book - 2010

Analyzes Buffett's techniques for arbitrage and special situations investing and offers step-by-step instructions on how to take advantage of such events as spin-offs, liquidations, recapitalizations, and tender offers.

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2nd Floor 332.645/Buffett Due Nov 19, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Scribner c2010.
Language
English
Main Author
Mary Buffett (-)
Other Authors
David Clark, 1955- (-)
Physical Description
xviii, 153 p. ; 20 cm
Bibliography
Includes glossary and index.
ISBN
9781439198827
  • Overview of Warren's very profitable world of stock arbitrage and special investment situations
  • What creates Warren's golden arbitrage opportunity
  • Overview of the different classes of arbitrage that Warren makes millions investing in
  • Where Warren begins - the public announcement - the beginning of the path to arbitrage riches
  • The arbitrage risk equation Warren learned from Benjamin Graham and how it can help make us rich
  • How Warren uses the annual rate of return to determine the investment's attractiveness
  • Leverage and arbitrage - how Warren uses borrowed money to triple his returns
  • Overview of mergers and acquisitions - where Warren has made millions
  • Friendly mergers - Warren's favorite arbitrage investment
  • Friendly merger arbitrage - things Warren considers when determining the probability of completion
  • A friendly merger arbitrage case study: Berkshire's merger with BNSF
  • Acquisitions - the hostile takeover - the most dangerous place Warren goes to make money
  • Securities buybacks/self-tender offers - how Warren arbitrages them to make even more money
  • How Warren has made hundreds of millions investing in corporate reorganizations
  • Corporate liquidations - how Warren turns them into liquid gold
  • Corporate spin-offs - how Warren made a fortune investing in them
  • Corporate stubs - where Warren got his start in arbitrage
  • Where Warren looks to find the golden arbitrage deals
  • Tendering our shares - how Warren cashes in.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Buffett, once a member of Warren's immediate family, and Clark, a writer with a background in finance and law (Warren Buffett's Management Secrets), tackle Mr. Buffet and stock arbitrage this time out. Warren Buffett is known for his ability to pick undervalued stocks and turn around beaten-down companies. He is less well known for his use of stock arbitrage, and the authors advance the argument that this method, though not particularly flashy, has been an excellent money maker for him. They take the reader through the different types of arbitrage-friendly mergers, hostile takeovers, self-tender offers, liquidations, spin-offs, stubs and reorganizations. In many of these, the stakes seem large and the profit seems small, but they yield a high percentage return. Mr. Buffett is rarely quoted directly in this short volume, but the authors provide numerous examples in how to implement his strategies. Even with his techniques explained however, not all will be enjoy Mr. Buffet's results. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

The latest exploration of Warren Buffet's financial prowess from his former -daughter-in-law Buffett and Clark, authors of six previous books on his investment strategies, takes the reader into the world of arbitrage and special situation investing. Arbitrage, the practice of taking advantage of a price difference between two markets by buying in one market and selling in another, has been one of Buffett's strongest financial operations, but almost nothing has been written about his methodology. Aimed at the casual investor, the book explains how anyone can use these strategies in his or her own portfolio. The writing is concise and straightforward, the examples are current and clear, and there are simple formulas on how to determine risk in both arbitrage and valuing liquidations. They also simplify the complicated situations of mergers, acquisitions, hostile takeovers, securities buybacks, and corporate liquidations to give readers an idea of how to find and understand their investment potential. VERDICT This book will appeal to investors looking for an introduction to arbitrage and special situations. The authors successfully outline this complicated world and explain how Buffett has harnessed these events for profit. Recommended.-John Rodzvilla, Emerson Coll., Boston (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

CHAPTER 1 Overview of Warren's Very Profitable World of Stock Arbitrage and Special Investment Situations The world of arbitrage and special situations is enormous. It can be found anywhere in the world where commodities, currencies, derivatives, stocks, and bonds are being bought and sold. It is the great equalizer of prices, the reason that gold trades at virtually the same price all over the world; and it is the reason that currency exchange rates stay uniform no matter where our plane lands. A class of investors called arbitrageurs, who make their living practicing the art of arbitrage, are responsible for this. The classic explanation and example of arbitrage is the London and Paris gold markets, which are both open at the same time during the day. On any given day, if you check the price of gold, you will find that it trades virtually at the same price in both markets, and the reason for this is the arbitrageurs. If gold is trading at $1,200 an ounce on the London market and suddenly spikes up to $1,205 on the Paris market, arbitrageurs will step into the market and buy gold in London for $1,200 an ounce and at the same time sell it in Paris for $1,205 an ounce, locking in as profit the $5 price spread. And arbitrageurs will keep buying and selling until they have either driven the price of gold up in London, or the price down in Paris, to the point that the price spread is gone between the two markets and gold is once again trading at the same price on both the London and Paris exchanges. The arbitrageurs will be pocketing the profits on the price spread between the two markets until the price spread finally disappears. This goes on all day long, every day that the markets are open, year after year, decade after decade, and probably will until the end of time. Up until the late 1990s the exchange of price information and buying and selling in the different markets was done by telephone, with arbitrageurs screaming orders over the phones at traders on the floors of the different exchanges. Today it is done with high-speed computers and very sophisticated software programs, which are owned and operated by many of the giant financial institutions of the world. STOCK ARBITRAGE A very similar phenomenon occurs in the world of stock arbitrage, only instead of arbitraging a price difference between two different markets, we are arbitraging the price difference between what a stock is trading at today versus what someone has offered to buy it from us for on a certain date in the future--usually anywhere from three months to a year out, but the time frame can be longer. The arbitrage opportunity arises when today's market price is lower than the price at which someone's offered to buy it, which lets us make a profit by buying at today's market price and selling in the future at a higher price. As an example: Company A's stock is trading at $8 a share; Company B comes along and offers to buy Company A for $14 a share in four months. In response to Company B's offer, Company A's stock goes to $12 a share. The simple arbitrage play here would be to buy Company A's stock today at $12 a share and then sell it to Company B in four months for $14 a share, which would give us a $2-a-share profit. The difference between this and your normal everyday stock investment is that the $14 a share in four months is a solid offer, meaning unless something screws it up, you will be able to sell the stock you paid $12 a share for today for $14 a share in four months. It is this "certainty" of its going up $2 a share in four months that separates it from other investments. The offer to buy the stock at $14 a share is "certain" because it comes as a legal offer from another business seeking to buy the company. Once the offer is accepted by Company A, it becomes a binding contract between A and B with certain contingencies. The reason that the stock doesn't immediately jump from $8 a share to $14 a share is that there is a risk that the deal might fall apart. In which case we won't be able to sell our stock for $14 a share and A's share price will probably drop back into the neighborhood of $8 a share. This kind of arbitrage might be thought of as "time arbitrage" in that we are arbitraging two different prices for the company's shares that occur between two points in time, on two very specific dates. This is different from "market" arbitrage where we are arbitraging a price difference between two different markets, usually within minutes of the price discrepancy showing up. It is this "time" element and the great many variables that come with it that make this kind of arbitrage very difficult to model for computer trading. Instead, it favors hedge fund managers and individual investors like Warren, who are capable of weighing and processing a dozen or more variables, some repetitive, some unique, that can pop up over the period of time the position is held. It is this constant need to monitor the position and interpret the economic environment that brings this kind of arbitrage more within the realm of art than science. © 2010 Mary Buffett Excerpted from Warren Buffett and the Art of Stock Arbitrage: Proven Strategies for Arbitrage and Other Special Investment Situations by Mary Buffett, David Clark All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.