Back To School: A Few Ideas To Study From The World’s Top Investors 

 | Sep 07, 2022 15:00

  • 2022 has been one long, painful lesson for investors and traders
  • Learning from the best is one way to get through it
  • We use InvestingPro+ to find ideas from the world’s best investors
  • Back-to-school season is here. As children, college students and teachers head back to the classroom, it’s also a time for investors to catch their breath - especially parents who have been juggling work and kids all summer.

    2022 has been a bit of a back-to-school moment for investors as well, as volatility, inflation, the Federal Reserve, bear market rallies, and the risk of recession have all reminded us that stock markets can go down. We can’t just blindly invest the way it felt like we could in 2021.

    The turn of the season is also an opportunity for us to crack the books and find new investing ideas. The volatile market offers some bargains, but also plenty of risks. So for this article, rather than plunging into the market alone, I’m going to look at a few ideas from some of the most well-known and successful investors in the world, using Daniel Loeb , Founder/President of Third Point Capital, a hedge fund - +18.2%

    With each of them, InvestingPro+ will not only show me their holdings, but the investing tool will also allow me to sort their holdings by biggest positions, or biggest companies by market cap. For this article, I want to look at their biggest buys in Q2, to see what stood out to them as the market officially hit a bear market level before the recent rebound. So, here’s the biggest buy from each of their portfolios, along with one bonus stock.

    Note: Pricing and data are as of August 30th market close.

    Warren Buffett/Berkshire Hathaway: Occidental Petroleum/h2

    Metric Name

    Value

    Price, Current

    72.01

    Market Cap

    66.895 B

    Enterprise Value (EV)

    95.404 B

    P/E Ratio (Fwd)

    6.6x

    Revenue CAGR (3y)

    13.3%

    Dividend Yield

    0.7%

    Fair Value (InvestingPro)

    97.13

    Fair Value Upside (InvestingPro)

    34.9%

    Source: InvestingPro+ Data Explorer

    It’s no surprise for anyone following Berkshire (NYSE:BRKa) (NYSE:BRKb) or Buffett’s buys closely that Occidental Petroleum (NYSE:OXY) is his biggest purchase for Q2. The Berkshire CEO received approval to buy up to 50% of the company as he builds up his exposure to the energy sector. While that might be a mistake Buffett’s experience and position at the head of a giant conglomerate make him tough to bet against.

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    Occidental has obviously benefited from the rise in oil prices, beating InvestingPro+

    David Einhorn/Greenlight Capital: Kyndryl Holdings
    /h2

    Metric Name

    Value

    Price, Current

    10.62

    Market Cap

    2.408 B

    Enterprise Value (EV)

    5.002 B

    P/E Ratio (Fwd)

    -13.6x

    Revenue CAGR (3y)

    -5.1%

    Fair Value (InvestingPro)

    11.26

    Fair Value Upside (InvestingPro)

    6.0%

    Source: InvestingPro+ Data Explorer

    David Einhorn has had a bit of a comeback year so far in 2022, outperforming the S&P 500 by 3300 basis points in the first half of 2022 (up 13.2% to the S&P 500 being down 20%). And if we focused on his biggest buy in Q2, we’d have another big win, as Atlas Air Worldwide (NASDAQ:AAWW) accepted a buyout proposal . Instead, we’ll move to his second biggest buy of the quarter.

    Kyndryl Holdings (NYSE:KD) is a spin-off from IBM (NYSE:IBM), incorporating IBM’s former data center business. Spin-offs are a classic value investing strategy, in part because they are often neglected businesses that, freed from a bulky parent, can fly under the radar and grow independently. IBM is as bulky a parent as it gets. Einhorn opened the position shortly after Kyndryl started trading in late 2021, and more than doubled it in each of the following two quarters.

    The business - similar to the other stocks in this article - is a bit of a commodity business, and right now Kyndryl is reporting losses. At a $2.5B market cap and a $3.8B enterprise value compared to guided revenue of $16.3-$16.5B for the year and an adjusted break-even income outlook, it might not take too much trimming or managing of the commodity business for Kyndryl to be another Einhorn win. The question is whether data center usage is on the permanent decline.