Avant garde wealth mgmt - Quarterly letter - 1312

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Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd. Note: “Portfolio” refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended “Portfolio” and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios Contents Emerging market turmoil – Comparing India with its peers Global macro – What could go wrong? Portfolio positioning – Cash continues to increase Stocks in the portfolio – Booked some profits Portfolio performance – Impacted by defensive posture Note: This letter is a bit more global macro focused than usual and reads longer due to the large number of charts Dear investor, With QE tapering by the Fed (US Federal Reserve) underway, jitters in emerging markets are back in focus, leading to a correction in global equities in January after a quarter of strong performance. In this letter we explore how India stacks up compared to its peers. We also highlight various stress points in the global economy that could lead to or exacerbate a decline in global equity prices. Emerging market turmoil – Comparing India with its peers The summer of 2013 witnessed significant volatility in asset prices as Fed Chairman Bernanke hinted at reducing the pace of quantitative easing (also referred to as tapering) and subsequently deferred the decision. With tapering now in place, asset prices and currencies in various emerging markets, led by Agrentina and Turkey, have come under severe pressure. In his book Code Red economist John Mauldin notes, “Whenever the Fed hikes rates, bad things happen somewhere. It's that simple.” Albert Edwards, strategist at Société Générale, elaborates with some examples 1 “There has never been any shadow of doubt in my mind that tapering = tightening, and I marvel that the Fed convinced anyone otherwise. A Fed tightening cycle inevitably plays a key role in triggering the next crisis (see below). Plus ça change, hey? 1970 Recession/Penn Central Railroad 1974 Recession/Franklin National Bank 1980 Recession/First Penn/Latin America 1984 Continental Illinois Bank 1987 Black Monday 1990 Recession/S&L and banking crisis 1997 Asian currency collapse/Russian default/LTCM 2007 The Great Recession/Collapse of almost the entire global financial system 2014 Emerging Market collapse/deflation/recession/another banking collapse etc.Through a few insightful charts sourced from John Mauldin’s recent newsletter 2 we compare how India has fared relative to its emerging market peers along various dimensions. 1 Sourced via www.zerohedge.com 2 Thoughts from the frontline – Central Banker Throwdown, Feb 1 2014 (www.mauldineconomics.com )

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Transcript of Avant garde wealth mgmt - Quarterly letter - 1312

  • 1. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Contents Emerging market turmoil Comparing India with its peers Global macro What could go wrong? Portfolio positioning Cash continues to increase Stocks in the portfolio Booked some profits Portfolio performance Impacted by defensive postureNote: This letter is a bit more global macro focused than usual and reads longer due to the large number of charts Dear investor, With QE tapering by the Fed (US Federal Reserve) underway, jitters in emerging markets are back in focus, leading to a correction in global equities in January after a quarter of strong performance. In this letter we explore how India stacks up compared to its peers. We also highlight various stress points in the global economy that could lead to or exacerbate a decline in global equity prices. Emerging market turmoil Comparing India with its peers The summer of 2013 witnessed significant volatility in asset prices as Fed Chairman Bernanke hinted at reducing the pace of quantitative easing (also referred to as tapering) and subsequently deferred the decision. With tapering now in place, asset prices and currencies in various emerging markets, led by Agrentina and Turkey, have come under severe pressure. In his book Code Red economist John Mauldin notes, Whenever the Fed hikes rates, bad things happen somewhere. It's that simple. Albert Edwards, strategist at Socit Gnrale, elaborates with some examples1 There has never been any shadow of doubt in my mind that tapering = tightening, and I marvel that the Fed convinced anyone otherwise. A Fed tightening cycle inevitably plays a key role in triggering the next crisis (see below). Plus a change, hey? 1970 Recession/Penn Central Railroad 1974 Recession/Franklin National Bank 1980 Recession/First Penn/Latin America 1984 Continental Illinois Bank 1987 Black Monday 1990 Recession/S&L and banking crisis 1997 Asian currency collapse/Russian default/LTCM 2007 The Great Recession/Collapse of almost the entire global financial system 2014 Emerging Market collapse/deflation/recession/another banking collapse etc. Through a few insightful charts sourced from John Mauldins recent newsletter2 we compare how India has fared relative to its emerging market peers along various dimensions. 1 2Sourced via www.zerohedge.com Thoughts from the frontline Central Banker Throwdown, Feb 1 2014 (www.mauldineconomics.com)Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios

2. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.After falling dramatically during the summer of 2013 the Indian Rupee has actually held up in value relatively well compared to peers.However, since 2009 inflation in India has been consistently higher than all other emerging markets and on par with Argentina. We are not in good company!The increase in government bond yields in India has been marginal compared to peers.Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 3. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.It can be argued that India has managed to bring down its current account deficit and shored up currency reserves and therefore the outperformance versus peers is well deserved. That may be so. The idea behind the above charts is simply to highlight how much worse other countries have fared in recent times. Even as Indias external account dynamics have improved, they are far from pristine, and the economy remains mired in low growth and high inflation due to declining productivity. Additionally, at any given point, the narrative surrounding a country (or any asset class for that matter) tends to dominate the underlying fundamentals and can become self fulfilling in the short term. In that light, the recent narrative among analysts and investors that the high growth in emerging markets in the past decade has largely been a product of Fed liquidity and that India is part of the Fragile Five economies (others being Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia, and South Africa) does not bode too well. Indian equity markets have received significant foreign capital inflows in the past decade. Also note that the outflows in 2008 and 2011 coincided with sharp losses in equity markets.Source: Bloomberg; Deutsche BankIndia has also received a disproportionate share of foreign flows compared to other Asian countries.Source: Bloomberg; Deutsche Bank Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 4. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.As a result, ownership of foreign institutions in Indian stocks is at an all time high.Source: Morgan StanleyIn the following section we discuss various risks to the global economy and financial markets. In the event that any of these risks materialize and there is a material decline in global equity prices, the weakness is likely to get transmitted to Indian equities via a slowdown or reversal in foreign fund flows. In a recent Bloomberg interview RBI (Reserve Bank of India) governor Raghuram Rajan lamented that cooperation among central banks was breaking down and that the Fed was attacking" emerging markets by continuing to shrink its quantitative easing program. He should know better. Self interest is the guiding principle in all policy making. The Fed is no more likely to set its policy according to the convenience of emerging markets than India is going to decide how much apparel to export based on the impact on Bangladesh. So it is nave to expect the Fed to pre-emptively act to prevent dislocations in other countries. Expect the Fed only to act reactively to external dislocations when they significantly impact, or imminently threaten to seriously impact, the US economy and capital markets. Global macro What could go wrong? As we began 2014 investor sentiment towards equities was very optimistic and complacency about possible risks was high. The thinking went broadly like this The US economy is recovering well and growth will accelerate; EU economies are reviving after bottoming and policy makers there have shown their commitment to maintain the Euro at any cost so risks of another sovereign debt crisis are negligible; Chinas debt problem is well known and while the growth rate may slow marginally the central planners there will figure out how to keep chugging along and avoid a credit crisis; while the Fed has started tapering QE and will probably end it in 2014 they will maintain low rates for a long time, thus supporting equity prices. With the recent emerging market driven 4-5% decline in equity prices risk antennae have risen slightly, but the mood is very much that this will be contained and is an opportunity to buy the dip. We dont have a strong view on whether this particular sell off in emerging markets will deepen imminently. However, we do observe that these tremors highlight the fragility in the global financial architecture. We discuss four potential problem areas for the global economy which could spring negative surprises in the months and years to come. Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 5. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.(1) Could the upcoming EU parliament elections in May 2014 mark a subtle shift in policymaking in European countries and lead to a repeat of the sovereign debt crisis?While one could look at various indicators, the chart above provides basis for optimism about a bottoming and continued revival in Eurozone economies. However, unemployment has stayed stubbornly high in 2013 despite the recovery in PMI survey readings and GDP growth rates.Source: Eurostat via www.zerohedge.comNote: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 6. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Particularly worrying is that youth unemployment has reached alarmingly high levels.The phenomenon of very high and persistent unemployment, especially for the youth, has probably supported the growing popularity of EU sceptic parties, which are also typically extreme right or left wing in ideology, across many European countries. The important ones are the UK Independence Party in UK, Syriza and Golden Dawn in Greece, Front National in France, and Five Star in Italy. During May 22nd to 25th 2014, elections to the EU parliament will be held. Today most seats are held by parties that swear by the European project and will do whatever it takes to ensure the integrity of the EU. Current opinion polls are indicating substantial gains for the Euro sceptic parties, and if this trend persists they could win a substantial number of seats in the upcoming elections3. If this were to occur, it has the potential to mark a subtle but substantial shift in the tone of policymaking in the EU. As incumbent governments sense the mood of their electorate, they may be forced to reconsider policies that are geared towards preservation of the Euro even at the cost of their domestic economies. Given the still precarious condition of most peripheral EU countries (and France), this may significantly increase the probability of a debt crisis recurring if investors sense this weakened resolve on the part of policymakers. (2) Could China send a deflationary shock into the global economy? The topic of excessive credit growth and mal investment in China has received a fair amount of attention lately among economists and participants in financial markets. The charts below highlight some key points about Chinas debt situation.3For a more detailed discussion on this topic please read Things That Make You Go Hmmm by Grant Williams (Feb 27, 2014); available on www.mauldineconomics.com Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 7. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Source: WIND, CEIC, Leasing Association, ChinaBond.com, Morgan StanleySource: CEIC, Morgan StanleySource: South China Morning Post; via Acting Man BlogTotal outstanding debt at ~235% of GDP is not abnormally high when compared to the other large developed countries. More important is that this figure has grown very rapidly from 155% in 2008, primarily driven by the large stimulus provided during the 2008 global financial crisis, which is evident from the step jump in money supply during that period. Economic history suggests that very rapid growth in credit leads to uneconomic investments and bad lending decisions, and it is now widely accepted among economists that overinvestment has been a problem in China, particularly over the last few years. The fact that shadow banking debt (loans outside the official banking system) is estimated to have tripled in size relative to GDP over the last five years only serves to confirm this hypothesis. There have been a few tremors in Chinas financial system recently. The SHIBOR (interbank rate) has seen very sharp spikes upwards multiple times over the past year but has subsequently stabilized after the central bank injected liquidity. More recently, in late January 2014, the government essentially bailed out investors of a wealth management product (part of the shadow banking system) after they were faced with substantial losses and there was risk of a wider loss of confidence. Chinas closed capital account and tight central control over the economy may mean a garden variety credit crisis like the ones we have seen in other emerging markets in the past is unlikely. But the laws of economics are no different for China. In order to fend of a crisis, credit will need to grow at an ever accelerating pace, in which case the imbalances will only get more pronounced and an eventual deep crisis will become more likely. If credit growth is slowed down, as seems to be the intent of the new government, GDP growth will need to slow down sharply due to the hit to aggregate demand. Either way, this will be deflationary for the Chinese economy. And in Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 8. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.the event that these deflationary tendencies become pronounced and threaten social stability, there is a possibility that China devalues the Yuan sharply in order to drive demand growth. Such a move would effectively export their deflation to the rest of the world, which would not be good for global equities. (3) Could the correlation of S&P500 with the Fed balance sheet break down and equity prices begin to reflect poor underlying fundamentals? In our September 2013 letter we shared a version of the chart below, which shows the strong correlation between the Feds balance sheet and the S&P500 since QE was implemented in 2009. We also quoted fund manager John Hussman to make the point that historic data does not suggest any mechanistic link between the two variables. Thus correlation likely does not imply causation and the link exists only because investors believe it to exist.Source: Deutsche Bank; BloombergWhy is this important? Because beliefs are susceptible to change. We quote Albert Edwards of SocGen once again as he says it best, For in the same way as investors believe, axiomatically that QE will drive up equity prices, they believed exactly the same thing of commodities until 2012. Commodities are a risk asset and benefited massively from QE1 and QE2, so why has QE3 had absolutely no effect on commodity prices? Exactly the same thing could happen to equities if a recession unfolds and profits plunge at the same time as the printing presses are running full pelt. Do not assume equities MUST benefit from QE. The following chart accompanies the commentary.Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 9. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.In our June 2013 letter we had pointed out that earnings growth for the S&P500 remained weak and the rise in equity prices was mostly a result of P/E multiple expansion. After bouncing back from depressed levels in 2009 the lack of growth in corporate profits is not particularly surprising since the current economic recovery in the US is the worst on record.While so-called operating earnings have been growing in high single digits actual reported earnings (including exceptional items) have shown zero growth recently.Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 10. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Sales growth has been anaemic, which is in keeping with slow GDP growth. Operating profit or EBIT (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) growth has been particularly dismal since late 2012. This indicates that even the mild EPS (Earnings Per Share) expansion that has been delivered during this period is only a result of lower interest rates and share buybacks.Profit growth is likely to continue to remain below sales growth given record high profit margins. In fact, historic analysis suggests that profits will actually decline over the next few years.Source: Hussman Funds Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 11. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.The prevailing belief is that US companies have not been investing enough and as they gain the confidence to invest it will set off a self fulfilling cycle of higher economic growth and in turn higher corporate profits. The data on the other hand shows that the ratio of capital expenditure to sales is close to record highs, and change in capex has been broadly tracking change in cash flows, implying little room for a significant increase in capital investment.Another common perception is that corporate balance sheets are in excellent shape with corporates hoarding cash, and as they choose to deploy this money economic growth will get a boost. It is true that cash balances are at record highs, but that is because companies have been issuing records amount of debt to raise cash. So net debt has actually not declined and is also at record highs.Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 12. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.So to summarize, this is the weakest economic recovery in the US on record, sales growth has been weak and is unlikely to get a boost from higher capital expenditure, profits have been flattish on declining margins and profits are likely to decline over the next few years given mean reversion from historically high margins, EPS growth has been ahead of profit growth due to issue of low cost debt to buy back shares, but even this has now run out of steam with EPS growth flat lining. Given such a weak fundamental backdrop, if investor faith in the efficacy of QE falters, the downside to equity prices could be substantial. Alternatively, if the Fed does actually follow through on its recent steps to gradually end QE, the resulting effect on equity prices could be similar. (4) Could the recent crisis in some emerging markets spread to Central Eastern Europe and cause a banking crisis in Europe? So far the emerging market crisis has been dominated by Turkey and countries in Latin America and Asia. While there is not much talk of emerging countries in CEE (Central Eastern Europe), this region seems very vulnerable to crisis. According to McKinsey4 All of the CEE economies experienced a boom before the global economic crisis, with GDP growth in the region averaging more than 5 percent a year from 2004 to 2008 and rapid progress in narrowing income and productivity gaps to Western European standards. And, in retrospect, it is clear that much of this growth was fuelled by consumption, made possible by borrowing and capital inflows from the EU15. The graph below provides empirical evidence for this assertion by showing that CEE countries that grew faster also ran higher current account deficits. The current account balance and economic growth for the CEE countries, annual data, 1995-2012Source: University College London SSEES Workshop (25-26 June 2013) Economic Growth in Central and Eastern Europe. Convergence, Capital Flows and Crisis, Karsten Staehr, Tallinn University of Technology 4McKinsey Global Institute A new dawn: Reigniting growth in Central and Eastern Europe Dec 2013Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 13. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Many CEE countries also run large fiscal deficits, leading to high public debt burdens. Fiscal Deficit as % of GDPPublic Debt as % of GDPExternal debt to GDP is a key indicator of potential risk of a credit crisis in a country. Reinhart and Rogoff suggest that if a countrys external debt exceeds 30% of GDP, there is material risk of a credit event. When comparing emerging markets along this dimension, CEE countries dominate the rankings with the highest debt to GDP ratios, and with significant debt maturities in less than a year. Country Argentina Greece Hungary* Latvia* Slovenia* Croatia* Bulgaria* Estonia* Georgia* Slovak Republic* Moldova* Ukraine Poland* Romania* Lithuania* Kazakhstan Belarus* Czech Republic* Turkey Chile Uruguay South Africa Thailand Malaysia Russian Federation Indonesia Mexico Peru Colombia India Philippines Brazil Ecuador Egypt, Arab Rep.Gross external debt (US$ billion) 134 566 196 42 54 61 51 22 13 79 6 138 377 135 32 148 37 102 373 125 22 137 139 106 714 260 374 55 90 400 59 472 18 47Gross external debt % of GDP 647% 232% 150% 137% 115% 105% 95% 89% 83% 82% 79% 78% 73% 73% 69% 66% 54% 51% 45% 44% 39% 39% 35% 34% 34% 30% 28% 26% 24% 23% 22% 22% 20% 18%Short term external debt % of GDP 25% 28% 12% 41% 22% 10% 28% 42% 15% 29% 30% 25% 13% 11% 20% 7% 34% 26% 34% 14% 23% 19% 41% 0% 11% 18% 19% 12% 13% 24% 17% 7% 0% 9%*Countries in Central Eastern Europe Note: Debt figures as of quarter end Sep 2013. GDP is for 2013; ST debt data is not available for Malaysia Source: Joint External Debt Hub (JEDH); IMF Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 14. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.To put the relative size in context, the Fragile Five plus Argentina and Ukraine, which are the focus of the emerging market crisis in the past year, have total external debt of $1.9 trillion (Q3 2013), which accounts for 31% of their combined GDP. In comparison, the CEE countries have $1.2 trillion of external debt accounting for 82% of combined GDP. In the event that the crisis spreads to the CEE countries and foreigners start redeeming their debt, it will result in the usual sequence of higher interest rates and currency devaluations, which will be recessionary for the countries involved. Given the high debt burdens it is quite likely that a material portion of debt may default. European banks have the largest exposure to this region. They are much more leveraged than their American peers and are already facing significant problems from non-performing assets in many EU countries (Spain, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal) and the ongoing crisis in Turkey (according to BCA Research, banks in the UK, France, Greece, and Spain have a combined exposure of US$123 billion to short-term, private-sector Turkish bank debt). So a scenario of defaults by CEE countries may be enough to push the European banking system over the edge and reignite a banking crisis. Portfolio positioning Cash continues to increase As of quarter end December 2013 we were 26% net long (44% long, 18% short), with 56% of the portfolio in cash and equivalents (the short positions are via futures). The sharp increase in cash is due to the sale of DB Corp and Thangamayil shares, and a temporary reduction in our Gold position, all of which are discussed in more detail later. We estimate that the long positions in aggregate have about 90% upside to their intrinsic value under base assumptions. Even under stress scenarios the aggregate intrinsic value is 25% higher than current prices, indicating limited risk of permanent capital loss. For our short positions we estimate base case intrinsic values approximately 40% below current prices and believe that the stocks are currently trading 25% higher than even optimistic estimates of intrinsic value. Fund Manager Seth Klarman (of the Baupost Group) stated that he worries top-down but invests bottom-up. This is an apt description of our investing strategy as well (although we only hope that we can even come close to emulating his investing success). Our current defensive positioning, with limited long exposure and large short positions, is a reflection of our worry about the global macro environment and the risk that it poses to equity prices in India. We continue to evaluate each investment idea on its merit and will add to our long portfolio if we find stocks at the right price. Our uneasiness about the macro environment leads to increased emphasis on the analysis of competitive advantages and resilience of business models and balance sheets in determining intrinsic value, and then demanding a higher discount to that intrinsic value than we would otherwise require. Stocks in the portfolio Booked some profits We have booked profits on some positions. We exited the position in DB Corp completely, reduced the weight in Thangamayil Jewellery, and temporarily sold the bulk of the Gold position. PiramalNote: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 15. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Enterprises is now the largest position in the portfolio, followed by Noida Toll Bridge and Blue Star. The other positions of roughly equivalent size are Manugraph, Thangamayil, and Jagran Prakashan. Our bullish view on Gold remains unchanged and the reason for the temporary sale of the Gold position is technical. Our holding was through the GoldBeeS ETF, which began to trade at a significant premium to gold prices on the commodity exchange during the quarter. In order to benefit from a reduction in the premium we decided to sell the ETF units. The premium has since declined and we currently anticipate buying back the entire position during the ongoing quarter at prices at par or lower than the sale price. Thangamayil remains a good franchise in our view given their focus on retailing gold jewellery in semi-urban and rural Tamil Nadu through a hub and spoke model of outlets. However, the recent RBI curbs on gold imports have hurt gold availability and put organized companies at a disadvantage by making smuggled gold available at a discount. This has hurt volumes and profits considerably given the negative operating leverage in the business model. There is low probability that the import restrictions will remain in place for a very long time and hence the value of the business has probably not been permanently impaired. But given the large negative impact while the curbs remain in place, we chose to reduce the size of our position to mitigate the risk to the portfolio from a potential sharp decline in price. We bought DB Corp when the companys earnings were under pressure (EPS declined 22% in FY12) and the outlook for growth remained bleak (FY13 EPS only grew 8%). As a result the stock was out of favour with investors, resulting in it being available at 15x trailing P/E and 3.5x P/B when we purchased it. Our focus was always on the quality of the franchise and the fact that the business was going through a cyclical downturn at the time. While we did not know when the cycle will turn we were willing to wait as long as the competitive advantages of the business remained intact. With earnings set to grow in excess of 30% in FY14 and a positive outlook for future growth, the thesis has played out as expected. We sold the stock at 17x trailing P/E and 4.1x P/B as we believed it was approaching our base case fair value, and also because in comparison its peer Jagran Prakashan seems to be trading at a significant discount to intrinsic value. The possibility that we sold too soon always exists but is something we are willing to live with in pursuit of our investment discipline. This remains a high quality business and we would be happy to buy in again at the right price. 35013 1230011 1025092008 Sold entire position150 Invested ~3% of the portfolio 1007 6 5 4503DB stock price (LHS)DB Price/Book (RHS)Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios 16. Avant Garde Wealth Management Pvt. Ltd.Portfolio performance Impacted by defensive postureFrom inception in June 2011 till end December 2013 the portfolio is up 11.3% while our benchmark, the BSE500 index, is up 8.9%. This translates into a CAGR of 4.2% for the portfolio vs. 3.4% for the benchmark. Cumulative portfolio returns vs. indexNAV (pre-fee)6-Dec-136-Nov-136-Oct-136-Sep-136-Jul-136-Aug-136-Jun-136-Apr-136-May-136-Mar-136-Jan-136-Feb-136-Dec-126-Nov-126-Oct-126-Sep-126-Aug-126-Jul-126-Jun-126-Apr-126-May-126-Mar-126-Jan-126-Feb-126-Dec-116-Oct-116-Nov-116-Sep-116-Aug-116-Jul-116-Jun-1125% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% -5% -10% -15% -20% -25%BSE500 IndexGiven the large cash and short positions in the portfolio it is not surprising that that the NAV has not moved much in the past quarter despite the sharp up move in the broader indices. We have made a conscious choice to be positioned very defensively in light of significant risks that we observe and the hidden ones that we dont. If we are right, we will have opportunities to deploy capital at much more attractive prices, setting the portfolio up for high prospective returns. If we determine that we are not right (and this is something we evaluate constantly), we will choose to reposition our holdings accordingly. The portfolio returns till date should not be seen as indicative of future performance. Our expectation that we will deliver significantly higher absolute and relative returns across market cycles remains unchanged. Thank you for your confidence and patience. Gaurav Jalan February 15, 2014Note: Portfolio refers to the weighted average of all client portfolios managed by us over the relevant time period. Any metrics such as returns or portfolio weighting similarly refer to the weighted average of all portfolios. Individual clients portfolios may defer materially from the blended Portfolio and clients should refer to their portfolio statements for details on their portfolios