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Month: December 2023

Charlie Munger: The Man Who Consistently Beat Alpha and Not Just in the Market

Most of us go through life wallowing in our own mediocrity. Not Charlie Munger.

A Legend Passes

Munger passed away last month at an age few of us will achieve. He was 99 and, as it turns out, roughly one month shy of his planned 100th birthday extravaganza. What is it that they say, “man plans and god laughs?” But Munger had his share of laughs too, many contributions, and no doubt tears that come with such longevity (he lost a son who died at age 9, his wife in 2010, and his left eye in his 50s from a failed cataract surgery). In the end though, he enjoyed more blessings than one man can stand. And, unlike Buffett who was somewhat fettered by the need to not offend, Munger got to say all the things he truly felt, or at least many of them, and we were better off for it.

To many, Munger will be remembered as the curmudgeonly, not terribly mobile, and slightly pugnacious lieutenant to the better-known Warren Buffet. But he was so much more than that: he was quick-witted, pithy, sagacious, and imbued with a life-long passion for learning. Perhaps the best way to pay homage to one of the greats who leaves behind an enormous legacy of insights and poetic nuggets is to share a few of them with you. 

Patience and Delayed Gratification Create Winners

Temperament and patience in investing were, in Munger’s views, more important than brains. Of course, you had to be smart enough but “the big money is not in the buying and selling…but in the waiting.” And he further noted that “it takes character to sit with all that cash and do nothing. I didn’t get to the top where I am by going after mediocre opportunities.”

Knowledge Can Make a Mediocre Mind Magnificent

On the importance of committing to a life of learning, “spend each day trying to be a little wiser than you were when you woke up…if you live long enough…you will get out of life what you deserve.” And the way you do that is through reading as in Munger’s “whole life, I have known no wise people (over a broad subject matter area) who didn’t read all the time—none, zero. My children think I’m a book with a couple of legs sticking out.”

Carpe Diem—Knowing and Seizing Opportunities and Passing On Junk

On recognizing wonderful opportunities that only come along a few times in a lifetime, wise investors should “bet heavily when the world offers them that opportunity.”  This of course requires capital on hand and the skill set to recognize a great opportunity from a good, mediocre, or even bad one. Are you able to do that?

Of course, nobody knowingly invests in a business that is grossly mismanaged, but when picking businesses to invest in, Munger admonished us to “invest in a business any fool can run, because someday a fool will.” A good business should be able to hold up during the inevitable periods of mismanagement.

On high-flying internet stocks, which he viewed unfavorably, Munger said “if you mix raisins with turds, they’re still turds” and on cryptocurrencies which he abhorred, “Sometimes I call it crypto shit.”

Passion Alone Is Not Enough—Buffett Is No Ballet Dancer

Recognizing that passion is necessary but not sufficient, Munger suggested “You’ll do better if you have passion for something in which you have aptitude. If Warren Buffett had gone into ballet, no one would have heard of him.” Maybe they would have as that would have been quite the spectacle.

Inflation Ain’t No Big Deal

On inflation, he paid little attention when investing saying “If I can be optimistic when I’m nearly dead, surely the rest of you can handle a little inflation.”

There are many books written about Charlie Munger but if you had to pick one, I suggest “Poor Charlie’s Almanack,” which was written by him. You will surely learn about his investing philosophy and approach to life. 

Website Sources:
Glanzer, T. (2023, April 30). Munger: "A lot of agony" in CRE loans. The Real Deal. https://therealdeal.com/national/2023/04/30/munger-a-lot-of-agony-in-cre-loans/

Moyer, L., & Cho, J. H. (2023, November 28). Munger’s Advice on Investing, Life Was Often Colorful, and Never Dull. Barrons. https://www.barrons.com/articles/charlie-mungers-quotes-investing-d877ce98?mod=hp_LEAD_3_B_1

Coy, P. (2023, December 6). Opinion | The Timeless Investing Wisdom of Charlie Munger, Buffett’s No. 2. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/06/opinion/charlie-munger-warren-buffett.html

Goodkind, N. (2023, November 29). Charlie Munger’s best quotes on investing, life and everything in between. CNN Business. Retrieved December 15, 2023, from https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/29/investing/premarket-stocks-trading-charlie-munger/index.html
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The Dilemma Albany Faces: Quid Pro Quo-Good Cause Eviction for 421a

On January 3, New York legislators open up the 2024 session and there is a lot at stake. There is a pending showdown between developers, landlords, and real estate investors on the one side and tenant advocacy groups on the other. If Governor Hochul wants a deal allowing for multifamily development to resume, she may have to concede the passage of “good cause” eviction at the state level. Such a deal would be a Pyrrhic victory with tremendous cost to the greater housing sector in New York City.

What is Good Cause Eviction?

In most US communities, landlords can hike rents, evict tenants through the courts, or simply not renew leases. As a result, millions of Americans lose their homes each year or deal with threats of housing loss. And this is no small concern. Eviction can have serious and far-reaching harms for individuals and families, including immediate homelessness, housing instability, loss of belongings, financial hardship, and disruption of education. It is well-documented that the stress of losing one’s home can lead to anxiety, depression, and even suicide. But is good cause eviction the panacea to all these woes and should landlords be the ones subsidizing free market rents?

Generally speaking, “good cause” eviction legislation prohibits landlords from evicting tenants for reasons other than good or just cause i.e., being a nuisance, damaging property, or consistent non-payment of rent. Fair enough, but the controversy arises with legislative language that places limits on rent increases despite the free market status of the apartments. In states with “good cause” eviction, rent increases are either capped at a specified limit (e.g., 7%) or, in some cases, the language is more ambiguous disallowing “unconscionable” increases. The latter (applicable in NJ) lacks legislative bite and generally doesn’t curtail the number of evictions. In such jurisdictions, landlords tend to increase rents at their discretion without running afoul of the law. Tenants who can’t or won’t pay the increased rent are booted from their apartments.

Local Jurisdictions in NY Tried Good Cause Evictions Previously

In July 2021, lawmakers in the city of Albany approved “good cause” eviction at the local level, and other cities—Kingston, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, and Beacon—followed suit a few months later. The laws capped rent increases at 5%, declaring anything in excess of that would be “unconscionable.” It didn’t last, however, as courts ruled these laws violated owners’ state property rights.

But the reprieve for landlords may be short-lived. The Democrats—who have a supermajority in New York State’s Senate and Assembly—are licking their chops as they want “good cause” at the state level and the circumstances may be just right for it to happen. Governor Hochul needs a win and pressure is mounting to jumpstart multifamily construction projects which seems to only be possible with a re-launch of the 421a tax benefits. NY State Senator, Brian Kavanagh, confirmed as much indicating that many of his colleagues are not willing to act on 421a without passing a version of “good cause” eviction. Sounds like quid pro quo but what will NY’s “good cause” eviction look like?

Good Cause Eviction is Catching on Across the Country

State-level “good cause” measures have been passed recently in California, Oregon, and Washington State. Legislators in Colorado, Connecticut, and Maryland have taken up the idea this year as well. “Good cause” has existed in New Jersey since 1974 but, as previously mentioned, it hasn’t had much impact on capping free market rents or in decreasing the number of evictions. In 2019, California passed AB1482, the Tenant Protection Act of 2019, which established statewide rent control. Specifically, rent increases are capped at 5% plus the change in the cost of living, or 10%, whichever is lower. To illustrate, in San Diego where the CPI increased by 4.1% from last year, landlords can increase rents in that county by 9.1% (i.e., 5% plus 4.1%). To the extent more stringent laws are already in place at the local level in California, then those laws trump AB1482.

New York is—perhaps unsurprisingly—looking to be more aggressive than California. Powerful Democrats, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Jerry Nadler, and Hakeem Jeffries, have named “good cause” eviction a top legislative priority.  The bill, if passed, would bar rent increases that exceed 3% of the previous rental amount, or 1.5 times CPI, whichever is higher.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the CPI increased by 3.5% in New York. The way the math typically works, there would be little difference in the permitted rental increases in New York for free market and rent stabilized apartments. It is no wonder then that “good cause” eviction is often referred to as “universal rent control.” Unlike in California, New York would impose rental increases on new and future, as well as, old housing stock. 

The Potential Impact of Good Cause Eviction

Landlord groups largely argue “good cause” eviction rules will slow down much needed new construction and hurt developers’ ability to get financing to complete their projects. Many in this camp also point out that there are already “incredibly strong tenant protections” in place and, if anything, the state should look to expand housing vouchers and legal representation for low income New Yorkers.

Supporters of “good cause” protections say the concerns of the real estate industry are nothing more than fear-mongering. Peter Hepburn, a sociologist at Rutgers University-Newark and an analyst at Princeton’s Eviction Lab, pointed to a “thriving rental market in New Jersey,” noting that “it has not collapsed by any stretch of the imagination.” That’s probably true but an incomplete assessment at best. New Jersey doesn’t cap free market rental increases the way New York is proposing to do. It is reasonable to believe that the rental caps proposed under the NY version of the law will have a chilling effect on construction projects and the ability to finance them. Land values will inevitably fall prompting owners to wait for a better legislative backdrop before selling or developing the land.

New York Senator Julia Salazar, who is leading the charge for “good cause” legislation in New York, said she would be concerned “if ‘good cause’ were in fact [an] impediment [to building]” noting New Jersey and Oregon as cases in point. But this is political theater of course with a heavy dose of hocus pocus and misdirection. New Jersey isn’t an appropriate comparison and Oregon only recently passed “just cause” eviction legislation in 2019 (and later updated the rules in 2023). The impact of Oregon’s law on new construction is simply too early to assess. Salazar claims that opposition to her bill is largely from those “who want to exploit the need people have to be housed.” That’s an outlandish claim that defies logic: developers are itching, practically begging, to build in New York. But not at an economic loss.

The horse trade of resurrecting 421a in exchange for “good cause” eviction is a bad one. Tax incentives alone won’t convince owners to build projects that are economically doomed the moment they are completed. Maybe the result of such a bargain is a city dotted with an overwhelming number of housing blocks reminiscent of the architectural pizazz of your 1970s run-of-the-mill NYC housing project.

Conclusion

Make no mistake: the “good cause” rules proposed by New York would be a full embrace of “universal rent control” across the state, including New York City. The rental landscape would include approximately one million apartments regulated under the HSTPA rules enacted in 2019 and the remaining two million free market units under “good cause” eviction at approximately 3%-5% annual rental increases. In other words, rent stabilization and “good cause” eviction would be a distinction without a difference.  

New York City is not Poughkeepsie, Salem (Oregon), or Newark. The city’s economy is larger than that of South Korea and Australia and getting this wrong could prove devastating. The housing shortage, despite Julia Salazar’s assured proclamations, would be exacerbated and you can expect the dilapidated state of many rent stabilized buildings to further play out across free market properties. The incentive to maintain and upkeep rent stabilized buildings evaporated the moment HSTPA became law and anyone in the commercial real estate space knows this.

Website Sources:
Cohen, R. M. (2023, May 1). The fight for “good cause” housing laws to prevent renter evictions. Vox. https://www.vox.com/policy/2023/5/1/23697209/landlords-tenants-good-cause-just-cause-eviction-housing

Effect of “Just Cause” Eviction Ordinances on Eviction in Four California Cities. (n.d.). Journal of Public and International Affairs. https://jpia.princeton.edu/news/effect-just-cause-eviction-ordinances-eviction-four-california-cities

Good Cause Eviction Bill That Would Impact Hotels Being Pushed Through New York Legislature | Insights | Holland & Knight. (n.d.). https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2023/04/good-cause-eviction-bill-that-would-impact-hotels-being-pushed-through

Chang, C. (2023, March 30). Good-Cause Eviction Keeps Dying in Court. Curbed. https://www.curbed.com/2023/03/good-cause-eviction-new-york-courts-losing.html

Consumer Price Index, New York-Newark-Jersey City — November 2023 : Northeast Information Office : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. (2023, December 12). https://www.bls.gov/regions/northeast/news-release/consumerpriceindex_newyork.htm#:~:text=Over%20the%20last%2012%20months,4.0%20percent%20over%20the%20year
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