A Prisoner of Profit
By Chris Mayer
"Every investor is a prisoner of the  times in which he 
lives," writes James Grant,  editor, Grant’s Interest Rate 
Observer. However,  the "incarceration" can take many 
different forms.  Sometimes during big bull markets, we 
investors  become shackled to the idea that start-up 
Internet  companies are worth billions of dollars. At other 
times, during big bear markets, we cannot seem to break 
free of the notion that America’s finest companies  are 
worth no more than 6 times earnings, even when  they are 
paying 7% dividend  yields.
In short, every investor must operate  within the times in 
which he lives, no matter how  nonsensical the times might 
be. The stock market  will respond to fundamental trends 
over a long  period of time, but over the short run, almost 
anything goes. Often, therefore, only a few key decisions 
could make you much wealthier…or much poorer.  Here is the 
tale of a man who, by making a few key  investment 
decisions, converted a small fortune  into a very large one 
during the difficult years  of 2000 to 2005, even when most 
investors were  losing money in the stock market…
Karl Hill turned about $6.5 million  into over $19 million 
in the five years between  March 2000 and March 2005. Who is 
Mr. Hill? He is  the owner and chairman of Monroe County 
Bank in  Forsyth, Ga…and, evidently, he is also a very 
savvy investor.
Two weeks ago, Hill shared some of his  insights with those 
of us attending the Grant’s  Spring Investment Conference in 
New York  City.
The 75-year-old Hill, despite his  folksy Southern style and 
modest appearance, is  well educated and worldly. He holds 
master’s  degrees in philosophy from the University of 
Chicago and social anthropology from Harvard. He is an Army 
veteran, former editor of the Beacon Press in  Boston and an 
original functionary at the U.S.  Department of Housing and 
Urban Development  (established by LBJ in 1965). Frankly, 
seeing him  and listening to his speech was worth the hefty 
price of admission to the entire conference. 
So how did this Yankee-educated  Southerner triple his 
wealth? Well, he did it on  the basis of a few big ideas.
First, Hill followed the old maxim  "Keep it simple." He 
talked about the verse by the  Greek poet Archilochus, which 
I used in the  January issue of Fleet: "The fox knows many 
things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing." Hill aims to 
know a few big things and not get lost in the  details.
He also cited the famous idea of  William of Ockham, the 
14th-century scholastic  philosopher who formulated the "law 
of parsimony,"  commonly known as "Ockham’s razor." The 
basic  principle could be summed up in the notion that the 
simplest methods are the best.
In addition to favoring simplicity,  Hill favors small 
companies over larger ones. He  relies on the work of 
Ibbotson Associates, and  quotes from their 2005 SBBI 
Yearbook: "One of the  most remarkable discoveries of modern 
finance is  the finding of a relationship between firm size 
and return. On average, small companies have higher returns 
than large ones… The relationship between firm  size and 
return cuts across the entire size  spectrum." So the two 
cornerstones of Hill’s  approach are: Keep it simple; and, 
the smaller,  the better.
Then, he basically had one big idea:  The dollar is a doomed 
currency…at least for the  time being. Therefore, he 
looked for ways to  "short-sell money," i.e. to bet against 
the value  of paper currency versus the value of real-world 
things. From this idea, he formulated a plan to invest in 
tangible assets, things you can "feel and touch,"  as he put 
it. 
He thought housing would do very well,  because he thought 
that when the average fellow  looked around for a "safe" 
place to park his  money, he would put it in housing. So he 
invested  heavily in homebuilders. Second, he bought gold 
and silver companies, base metal producers, oil and gas 
companies and some real estate  companies.
Of course, you don’t need to know the  specifics of how 
these sectors performed to know  that Hill was right on 
target. 
So what is he doing today? Well, he’s  sold most of the 
homebuilders, he says, because he  is worried that interest 
rates will move higher.  He has done a complete about-face 
on this sector.  He dismisses the housing market as a 
bubble. But  otherwise, he continues to play the same 
general  tune: The value of our paper dollar will go nowhere 
but down over the long run and the value of "things" will 
rise. He’s taken on foreign currency exposure,  like the 
euro, and bought some TIPS  (inflation-protected government 
bonds). 
Hill’s story is remarkable, and his  investment philosophy 
is similar in some respects  to our philosophy here at the 
Fleet Street Letter.  In the April issue, we spent some time 
in the back  part of the letter outlining similar thoughts 
with  regard to the decline of paper and the rise of 
tangible assets – and we used examples of great American 
fortunes that endured all sorts of calamity by  investing in 
tangible assets that held (and  increased) their values over 
time. Commodities are  not normally our beat at Fleet, but 
as they  sometimes can be bought on the cheap, we’re 
interested (as our exposure in timber and fertilizer 
assets, among other commodities, shows). 
Of course we don’t expect to triple our  money over the next 
five years, but good things  often happen to folks who make 
decisive, targeted  investments in key fundamental trends. 
If we are,  indeed, prisoners of the times in which we live, 
then Hill’s story demonstrates how a few big ideas can go a 
long way toward making our incarceration more  comfortable.
Did You Notice…?
By Eric J. Fry
Have U.S. consumers finally disposed of  all their 
disposable income? Have they finally  extracted – and spent 
– the last pennies of equity  from their homes? Are they now 
forced to rely on  their incomes – and only their incomes – 
to fuel  their consumption?
If so, yesterday’s bleak durable goods  report will not be 
the last. Orders to U.S.  factories for big-ticket 
manufactured goods  plunged 2.8 percent in March, the 
biggest setback  in 2 1/2 years and the third straight 
decline. The  March drop followed declines of 0.2 percent in 
February and 1.2 percent in January.
"The 2.8 percent drop in overall orders  was the biggest 
decline since a 6 percent plunge  in September 2002," 
CBSMarketwatch reports. "It  was a far worse performance 
than analysts had  expected."
Interestingly, the sharp drop in  durable goods orders was 
NOT far worse than the  Index of Leading Economic Indicators 
(LEI) had  anticipated.
As the chart below clearly illustrates,  the LEI has 
complied a pretty impressive record of  anticipating U.S. 
economic trends. Specifically,  the year-over-year percent 
change of the LEI tends  to lead the year-over-year change 
of U.S.  Industrial Production by about five months.
Please note that the LEI is continuing to  head in a 
southerly direction. In other words,  don’t expect Mr. and 
Mrs. Consumer to break out  their wallets and pocketbooks 
any time  soon.
And the Markets…
Wednesday  | Tuesday  | This week  | Year-to-Date  | |
DOW  | 10,199  | 10,151  | 41  | -5.4%  | 
S&P  | 1,156  | 1,152  | 4  | -4.6%  | 
NASDAQ  | 1,930  | 1,927  | -2  | -11.3%  | 
10-year Treasury  | 4.23%  | 4.27%  | -0.03  | 0.01  | 
30-year Treasury  | 4.55%  | 4.57%  | -0.03  | -0.28  | 
Russell 2000  | 587  | 588  | -2  | -9.9%  | 
Gold  | $432.80  | $437.12  | -$1.80  | -1.1%  | 
Silver  | $7.11  | $7.24  | -$0.17  | 4.4%  | 
CRB  | 305.88  | 309.78  | -1.41  | 7.7%  | 
WTI NYMEX CRUDE  | $51.61  | $54.20  | -$3.78  | 18.8%  | 
Yen (YEN/USD)  | JPY 105.84  | JPY 106.00  | 0.14  | -3.2%  | 
Dollar (USD/EUR)  | $1.2931  | $1.2978  | 135  | 4.6%  | 
Dollar (USD/GBP)  | $1.9058  | $1.9057  | 89  | 0.6%  | 

                            	        
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