Wally Weitz: Stock Price Inflation Very Different From Housing Bubble

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Dear Fellow Shareholder:
Wally Weitz from his Q3 letter

Our stock fund returns in the third quarter and first nine months of 2013 have been very strong.

Wally Weitz: Stock Price Inflation Very Different From Housing Bubble

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We are now four and a half years into the recovery from the worst bear market in decades. This means that our results over the past one, five and ten years are very good. Shareholders might be more interested, though, in the full-cycle numbers shown below. The first table shows average annual returns for each period and the second shows cumulative returns. In each table, the first column shows the 18-month period of general market decline. The second shows the 4½ year recovery (so far). The final column shows returns for the full 6-year period.

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Click here to see our Full Performance Summary. These performance numbers reflect the deduction of each Fund’s operating expenses. Annual operating expenses for each Fund, as stated in the most recent Prospectus, and expressed as a percentage of each Fund’s net assets, are: Value, 1.20%; Partners Value, 1.19%, Partners III Opportunity—Institutional Class, 1.60%; Hickory, 1.26%; Research, 1.74% (gross); and Balanced, 1.13%. The returns assume redemption at the end of each period and reinvestment of dividends. Total returns show include fee waivers and expense reimbursements, if any; total returns would have been lower had there been no waiver of fees and/or reimbursements of expenses by the Adviser. This information represents past performance and past performance does not guarantee future results. The investment return and the principal value of an investment in any of the Funds will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than the original cost. Current performance may be higher or lower than the performance data quoted above. Weitz Securities, Inc. is the distributor of The Weitz Funds.
Considering the trauma of the financial crisis and the “Great Recession,” this is a pretty good advertisement for “staying the course” during turbulent markets. (Dollar cost averaging throughout this period—buying equal dollar amounts at regular intervals—would have produced even better results.)

The returns on the Balanced Fund over this six-year period illustrate the attraction of a fund that holds both stocks and bonds. Brad manages this Fund and adjusts the mix of stocks and bonds according to their relative attractiveness. This Fund is designed for persons who want to delegate to us the asset allocation among stocks, bonds and cash equivalents.

Bonds, as we have discussed in recent letters, have probably come to the end of their 30-year bull market. Their yields are artificially depressed (and prices artificially inflated) by Federal Reserve actions. This leaves bond investors in an awkward position. We do not know when interest rates will rise, but absent a serious recession, they will. When this happens, holders of long-term bonds will be “locked into” current low interest rates and will experience poor returns. For example, a 20-year bond with a 4% interest “coupon” that sells for $1,000 today will become a 19-year bond in one year. If the going rate of interest on 19-year bonds is 6% at that time, that bond will sell at $775. The investor will have collected $40 interest but have a $225 unrealized loss. By contrast, today’s 2-year bond with a 2% coupon will become a 1-year bond a year from now and sell at about $980 if rates on 1-year bonds have risen to 4%. In this case, the investor roughly breaks even—$20 interest collected and $20 price depreciation.

Given our expectation that interest rates will rise over the coming years, Tom Carney has focused our Short-Intermediate Income Fund (and the Nebraska Tax-Free Income Fund) on short, high quality bonds. The strategy is to earn our coupon interest and reinvest the proceeds from maturing bonds into higher yielding new bonds. At some time in the future, bond market conditions will change and we will be adequately compensated for taking both interest rate and (moderate) credit risk, but for now, we are maintaining defensive and conservative bond portfolio positioning.

Portfolio Review and Outlook

Each of the past several quarters, we have written that stock prices seem to be rising faster than the companies’ underlying business values. In our last report, we described our Funds’ top ten stock positions and said that their long-term prospects were good but that they were fairly priced. So, of course, those ten stocks rose by an average of 9% during the 3rd quarter. We are not unhappy or ungrateful about earning these good returns—that is what we are here for. However, it seems likely that stock prices may be a little ahead of themselves.

The good news is that we believe that this period of stock price inflation is very different from the housing and mortgage market bubble that burst in 2007. Six years ago, home prices were rising rapidly, real estate speculation was rampant, and credit standards were abandoned. Risky mortgages were packaged into mortgage-backed securities of dubious quality, were sold to banks and speculators, and eventually caused hundreds of billions of dollars in losses for the banking system. Liquidity crises arose, bankruptcies were filed, bailouts were arranged, and “extraordinary measures” were taken by the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury. We lived through it (see table earlier in letter), but the country is still in recovery mode.

Because the recovery is weak and unemployment stubbornly high, the Fed is trying to stimulate economic activity by buying $85 billion per month of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities. We believe that quite a bit of this money pumped into bond markets has seeped into other parts of the securities markets—including the U.S. stock market. It also seems likely that the Fed’s promise to keep interest rates low for “an extended period” has attracted speculators who borrow short-term money at very low rates and invest in longer-term bonds which pay higher interest rates (“carry trades”). Hence, stock and bond price inflation.

Nothing is ever as simple as it seems in the world of global economics and stock markets. “Tapering” by the Fed (slowing the rate of bond purchases), and the Fed’s eventual selling of bonds, will inevitably reverse some of the security price inflation that has occurred over the past two years. Europe and China seem likely to cause anxious moments in financial markets, and our own budget and debt ceiling negotiations are likely to be unattractive. But both the U.S. and global economies are growing and good companies around the world are finding ways to grow and increase the value of their businesses. This is why we believe that while the market may well get a correction—perhaps a sharp one—we are not headed back into a financial crisis where investors contemplate the end of the world and sell stocks accordingly.

We own shares in strong companies that have historically coped well with changing economic conditions and we trust them to navigate in turbulent times. We also hold substantial cash reserves in our funds and look forward to redeploying them, but we will be patient. Markets move on their own schedules and our goal is to be opportunistic on your behalf.

Sincerely,

Wallace R. Weitz
[email protected]

Bradley P. Hinton
[email protected]

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