Notes from the 2015 Ira Sohn Conference, Part II

gundlach

DoubleLine Capital’s Jeffrey Gundlach takes the stage

See Part I if you missed it, includes commentary from Leon Cooperman and others!

***

Larry Robbins, Founder, Portfolio Manager, and CEO, Glenview Capital Management LLC

He’s still bullish on the overall market. “20 years ago, the S&P 500 was selling at 515 and somebody came up on a stage just like this one and told you it was massively overvalued.”

Capital is still cheap. It pays to play the theme that companies can borrow for nothing and leverage on your behalf as a shareholder.

He says AbbVie falls into this category. Pretty cheap, 12.5x 2016 numbers. Excess cash or borrowing capacity of $20 billion. They can buyback or make deals. Humira drug is the largest in the world. The big debate on Wall Street is if they’ll lose their patent to biosimilars. “Even if biosimilars are introduced in 2017, the company will still grow earnings by 8-10%.”

He sees a lot of catalysts in the pipeline. $18 billion in pipeline versus Street’s pricing in about $6 billion in value.

He also thinks making a biosimilar for something like Humira is 1000 times harder than making generic tylenol. State by state is another protection – some states are banning biosimilars for health concerns,

US patent protection for Humira through the years 2022 – 2026.

Needle-less injection method coming soon, will allow them to maintain their favorable advantages on the drug.

Sees continued margin improvements for AbbVie as well. Sees tax savings possible and more buybacks. Could add 15 dollars to the share price through repurchasing 30% of their shares through year-end 2017.

There’s also always the chance they could be acquired. Thinks the stock could double from here.

Robbin’s only had 2 minutes left to discuss Brookdale Senior Living, another of his picks. 65 million elderly Americans live within 10 miles of a Brookdale facility.

Break-in: 

We are told that the Ira Sohn Foundation has raised $60 million for pediatric cancer research over the last twenty years, including $4 million today alone. How awesome is that?

Mala Gaonkar, Co-Portfolio Manager, Lone Pine Capital LLC

Gaonkar has been with Lone Pine since 1998. We’ve been told that Lone Pine has “easily one of the best track records in the industry.”

One of “our most debated ideas” at Lone Pine: The value hidden in legacy tech. Specifically, her idea is long Microsoft.

Four reasons:

Management – prior management was stuck in the “innovator’s dilemma”. Satya Nadella built cloud business. “There’s no more screaming about ‘Save Windows First.'”

Growth – Consumer Windows is tiny – 5% of top line revenue. IBM’s mainframe biz is still currently $5 billion a year. “Changes are very expensive.” Enterprise software spend is growing steadily. Only flattened during the crisis. Cloud software sales are doubling each year, meanwhile. Most people don’t understand that most of the cloud software spend is happening with legacy tech companies like MSFT. Microsoft is driving paid users like crazy built off of Office installed user base, bundling things like Skype minutes, Dropbox storage space etc.

Operating cost cuts – each group inside MSFT has its own P&L. “It will take a long time to turn, but turn it will.”

Capital Return – “No earthly reason for this level of cash.” Thinks buybacks will increase and continue.

Her 2016 estimates: $106 billion in revenue, growing 9% a year, with almost four bucks a share in earnings.

Sohn Investment Idea Contest

The kid who won is introduced by Joel Greenblatt. He pitches IAC Corp as a free option on Tinder, which it owns a stake in. “This is the way we will date from now on. To use a phrase that all of you can relate to, Tinder is bringing liquidity to the marketplace.” He goes on to point out the paid version’s revenue growth, user metrics, etc. This is a great idea. The kid’s funny too.

Jeffrey Gundlach, CEO and CIO, DoubleLine Capital LP

“I’m looking for a loan. Short-term is fine. I’ll pay negative 1.” – an allusion to Germany’s current yield.

“Borrow infinite amount at negative interest rates.”

Goes into a really complex explanation of Mondrian’s abstract art. “The king of reductive painting.” Cites Hemingway as the king of reductive writing.

“All the Fed, all the time” – how reductive financial analysis has become. “Zero percent interest rates are now knitted into the fabric of investors’ bones.”

Jeff is looking at nominal GDP, believes that rates are bottoming. 10-year treasury could not take out the low of 2012. 2-year rates bottomed four years ago.

Thinks high yield bonds are at risk. “No one in this room has lived through a secular interest rate rise in high yield bonds.” High yield bonds do not do well versus treasurys once the Fed starts raising interest rates.

“But I’m not that concerned about the high yield bond market yet – because there are no maturities.” He cites 2018-2019 as Doomsday. Fed-held treasury maturities spike around the same time. The default rate for high yield bonds will not be the same in secular rising interest rates.

Puts up a slide about Fidel Castro – “Our new friend and ally.” Crowd laughs. He wants to talk Puerto Rican muni bonds. “My recommendation for a risky thing to buy – Puerto Rican muni bonds have priced in a lot of problems.” He thinks they could get cheaper so he’s just begun to buy. Plans to average in over time. “I think these bonds go lower, but I think you start buying them.” “They’re priced for default, but paying monthly – you only need a few coupons to drastically lower your coast average.”

***

Come back for Part III, featuring William Ackman and David Tepper! 

 

 

This content, which contains security-related opinions and/or information, is provided for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon in any manner as professional advice, or an endorsement of any practices, products or services. There can be no guarantees or assurances that the views expressed here will be applicable for any particular facts or circumstances, and should not be relied upon in any manner. You should consult your own advisers as to legal, business, tax, and other related matters concerning any investment.

The commentary in this “post” (including any related blog, podcasts, videos, and social media) reflects the personal opinions, viewpoints, and analyses of the Ritholtz Wealth Management employees providing such comments, and should not be regarded the views of Ritholtz Wealth Management LLC. or its respective affiliates or as a description of advisory services provided by Ritholtz Wealth Management or performance returns of any Ritholtz Wealth Management Investments client.

References to any securities or digital assets, or performance data, are for illustrative purposes only and do not constitute an investment recommendation or offer to provide investment advisory services. Charts and graphs provided within are for informational purposes solely and should not be relied upon when making any investment decision. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The content speaks only as of the date indicated. Any projections, estimates, forecasts, targets, prospects, and/or opinions expressed in these materials are subject to change without notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by others.

Wealthcast Media, an affiliate of Ritholtz Wealth Management, receives payment from various entities for advertisements in affiliated podcasts, blogs and emails. Inclusion of such advertisements does not constitute or imply endorsement, sponsorship or recommendation thereof, or any affiliation therewith, by the Content Creator or by Ritholtz Wealth Management or any of its employees. Investments in securities involve the risk of loss. For additional advertisement disclaimers see here: https://www.ritholtzwealth.com/advertising-disclaimers

Please see disclosures here.

What's been said:

Discussions found on the web
  1. jasa pembuatan website commented on Oct 29

    … [Trackback]

    […] Find More here to that Topic: thereformedbroker.com/2015/05/04/notes-from-the-2015-ira-sohn-conference-part-ii/ […]

  2. abacus innovations global inc commented on Dec 07

    … [Trackback]

    […] Information to that Topic: thereformedbroker.com/2015/05/04/notes-from-the-2015-ira-sohn-conference-part-ii/ […]

  3. Tree Cutting near me commented on Dec 11

    … [Trackback]

    […] Information on that Topic: thereformedbroker.com/2015/05/04/notes-from-the-2015-ira-sohn-conference-part-ii/ […]

  4. td bank easyweb commented on Dec 13

    … [Trackback]

    […] Find More on on that Topic: thereformedbroker.com/2015/05/04/notes-from-the-2015-ira-sohn-conference-part-ii/ […]