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	<title>Whiskey and Gunpowder &#187; &#8220;Safety is No Accident&#8221;</title>
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		<title>Coho Partners, Ltd: Crash Protection</title>
		<link>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/coho-partners-ltd-crash-protection/</link>
		<comments>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/coho-partners-ltd-crash-protection/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Nov 2005 19:04:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Byron King</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Oil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA["Safety is No Accident"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How Do You "Make Sure It Does Not Happen to You?"]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Byron King responds to reader mail, and recounts a discussion he had with Peter Thompson, the manager of Coho Partners, Ltd. &#8220;PEAK OIL, PEAK OIL. Dad, how come you talk about Peak Oil all the time?&#8221; said my daughter. We were driving along the back routes of Pennsylvania&#8217;s scenic Mercer County, and I had just [...]<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/coho-partners-ltd-crash-protection/">Coho Partners, Ltd: Crash Protection</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="Normal">Byron King responds to reader mail, and recounts a discussion he had with Peter Thompson, the manager of Coho Partners, Ltd.</span></p>
<div><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">&#8220;PEAK OIL, PEAK OIL. Dad, how come you talk about </span><span class="Normal">Peak Oil all the time?&#8221; said my daughter. We were driving </span><span class="Normal">along the back routes of Pennsylvania&#8217;s scenic Mercer </span><span class="Normal">County, and I had just pointed out a couple of old stripper </span><span class="Normal">wells that are visible from the road. We were passing a </span><span class="Normal">Mennonite man, driving a horse-drawn buggy, and I was </span><span class="Normal">commenting upon &#8212; what else? &#8212; the future of oil </span><span class="Normal">production on the backside of Hubbert&#8217;s Peak. I do not </span><span class="Normal">really talk about Peak Oil &#8220;all the time.&#8221; For example, just </span><span class="Normal">ask me about the Russo-Japanese War. But Peak Oil </span><span class="Normal">certainly is a central phenomenon of our age. My daughter </span><span class="Normal">(and everyone else on this blue planet) will be living with </span><span class="Normal">the effects of Peak Oil for the rest of her (and their) days. </span><span class="Normal">Ignore it at your peril.<br />
</span></span><span class="Normal"><br />
<span class="Normal">*  *  *  *<br />
</span><br />
<span class="Normal">&#8220;Barrick is buying Placer Dome,&#8221; noted one of the </span><span class="Normal">associate attorneys in the law firm where I work. &#8220;Do you </span><span class="Normal">think that gold is still worth buying?&#8221; Around the office, I </span><span class="Normal">am known &#8212; if you can believe this &#8212; for peppering lunch </span><span class="Normal">conversations with my views on the decline of the dollar, </span><span class="Normal">the ineptitude of the Federal Reserve, the inherent worth of </span><span class="Normal">gold, and the merits of a gold standard. My reply to the </span><span class="Normal">question was to advise the inquiring attorney to think like a l</span><span class="Normal">awyer and follow the money. If Barrick believes that </span><span class="Normal">Placer Dome is worth over $19 billion at a gold price of </span><span class="Normal">$465 per ounce, then somebody with deep pockets, if not </span><span class="Normal">some financial savvy, must believe that gold in the ground </span><span class="Normal">is still worth buying. If gold in the ground is worth serious </span><span class="Normal">money, what does that imply for gold that is already </span><span class="Normal">mined?</span></span></span></div>
<p><span class="Normal"> </p>
<p></span></p>
<div><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">*  *  *  *</span></span></span></div>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">&#8220;I enjoyed reading your article on the Peloponnesian War,&#8221; </span><span class="Normal">wrote a retired U.S. Navy admiral from his home in San </span><span class="Normal">Diego. &#8220;Sparta was more than pleased to see Athens waste </span><span class="Normal">its power and wealth fighting a badly executed war against </span><span class="Normal">Syracuse, in distant Sicily. Were you being kind or simply </span><span class="Normal">deferential to the U.S. national chain of command not to </span><span class="Normal">make a direct comparison to the United States squandering </span><span class="Normal">its military assets and resources in Iraq? But it was clear to </span><span class="Normal">me that our current national blunder was what you were </span><span class="Normal">discussing. The analogy is plain. The conclusions are </span><span class="Normal">obvious. This Iraq War may well be the worst strategic </span><span class="Normal">error that the United States has ever made.&#8221; All I will say in </span><span class="Normal">reply is that I appreciate receiving thoughtful comments </span><span class="Normal">from retired U.S. Navy admirals.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal">*  *  *  *</span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">&#8220;Your article about the fall of General Motors and the </span><span class="Normal">decline of the U.S. auto industry was right on,&#8221; wrote </span><span class="Normal">another reader, who says he is a retired autoworker living </span><span class="Normal">in Ohio. &#8220;Bad management, rabid unionism, poor government policies, and the wreck of the U.S. dollar are killing U.S. manufacturing. This country is getting hollowed out, and we have no one to blame but ourselves.&#8221; </span><span class="Normal">Thank you, sir, for your great comments. But actually, I did </span><span class="Normal">not write about the fall of General Motors and the decline </span><span class="Normal">of the U.S. auto industry, etc. That was my Whiskey &amp; </span><span class="Normal">Gunpowder colleague Mish. Still, count me as being </span><span class="Normal">onboard with the sentiment.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal">*  *  *  *</span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">So dear readers, where do we go from here? It looks bleak, </span><span class="Normal">doesn&#8217;t it? What with Peak Oil, the declining dollar, the </span><span class="Normal">War in Iraq, the demise of U.S. industry and the middle </span><span class="Normal">class that it supports things are really looking like a first-</span><span class="Normal">class mess.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><strong>Coho Partners, Ltd.:&#8221;Whatever Is Going to Happen…&#8221;</strong></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">But are we truly lashed to the helm of the Ship of Doom? </span><span class="Normal">As I have said before, in other articles and at other times, &#8220;Whatever is going to happen is going to happen. Just make sure it does not happen to you.&#8221;</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">In the nature of full disclosure, that line comes from the </span><span class="Normal">mouth of a fictional character named Max Detweiler, the </span><span class="Normal">musical promoter and supporting player in that great </span><span class="Normal">Broadway classic The Sound of Music. Poor Captain von </span><span class="Normal">Trapp, pater familia of the brood, was concerned about the </span><span class="Normal">looming Anschluss, wherein Hitler&#8217;s Germany was going </span><span class="Normal">to take over Austria in March of 1938. Max was trying to </span><span class="Normal">get the Captain&#8217;s kids to sing in the local musical festival. </span><span class="Normal">The Captain was furious that Max was worrying about such </span><span class="Normal">silliness as a songfest. This is the context of the line. It is </span><span class="Normal">such a great line, too. &#8220;Whatever is going to happen is </span><span class="Normal">going to happen. Just make sure it does not happen to you.&#8221;</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Sure enough, Anschluss occurred. The kids still sang in the </span><span class="Normal">songfest. Captain von Trapp and his young bride Maria and </span><span class="Normal">the kids (from the first marriage) all marched over the hills </span><span class="Normal">to Switzerland. &#8220;Climb Ev&#8217;ry Mountain&#8221; and all that. It was </span><span class="Normal">a happy ending as only Broadway can deliver. But </span><span class="Normal">whatever was going to happen, happened. And old Captain </span><span class="Normal">von Trapp made sure that it did not happen to him and his </span><span class="Normal">clan.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><strong>Coho Partners, Ltd: How Do You &#8220;Make Sure It Does Not Happen to You?&#8221;</strong></span></p>
<p> </p>
<p></span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">So what does Max Detweiler&#8217;s sage advice mean for you </span><span class="Normal">and me, dear reader? You can take it a lot of ways, but I </span><span class="Normal">had a long and interesting discussion with one of our fellow </span><span class="Normal">Whiskey &amp; Gunpowder readers, Peter Thompson, manager </span><span class="Normal">of Coho Partners Ltd. of West Conshohocken, Pa. (<a href="http://www.cohopartners.com">http://www.cohopartners.com</a>).  Peter&#8217;s company, located <span class="Normal">in suburban Philadelphia, for all of you who have never </span><span class="Normal">heard of Conshohocken, let alone West Conshohocken, </span><span class="Normal">manages funds for institutions. Coho Partners also manages </span><span class="Normal">funds for other individuals and entities of, as Peter so </span><span class="Normal">delicately puts it, &#8220;high net worth.&#8221; Like I told the young </span><span class="Normal">attorney, think like a lawyer and follow the money.</span></span></span></p>
<div><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">According to Peter, Coho manages for the long run. The </span><span class="Normal">firm&#8217;s goal is to capture the majority of broad market </span><span class="Normal">advances, and, more importantly, to protect principal </span><span class="Normal">during difficult times. Coho looks for companies that grow </span><span class="Normal">earnings and cash flow. Coho also looks for companies that </span><span class="Normal">have an above-average dividend yield, with payout ratios </span><span class="Normal">that allow for increasing dividends during flat earnings </span><br />
<span class="Normal">periods. Coho wants the companies in its portfolio to have </span><span class="Normal">a tendency to increase their dividends at least annually. </span><span class="Normal">&#8220;There is nothing wrong with getting paid to wait,&#8221; said </span><span class="Normal">Peter. Getting paid to wait? Sounds good to me.</span></span></span></span></span></div>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">&#8220;By comparison with the go-go money runners, we might </span><span class="Normal">look like we modestly underperform during the good times. </span><span class="Normal">But our strong suit is to avoid the pain during the tough </span><span class="Normal">times.&#8221; Tough times? We of the Peak Oil persuasion </span><span class="Normal">happen to have some opinions on &#8220;tough times,&#8221; so tell me </span><span class="Normal">more. Looking at Peter&#8217;s numbers, his firm has made </span><span class="Normal">money in the rising market of late. So far, so good. Going </span><br />
<span class="Normal">back a few years, Peter&#8217;s firm has done well in protecting </span><span class="Normal">his clients when the markets fell, particularlyduring the </span><span class="Normal">tech crash of 2000. And as far as I am concerned, in this </span><span class="Normal">day and age, not losing it is the same as making it.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Here is what Peter said: &#8220;OK, so let&#8217;s take Peak Oil at face </span><span class="Normal">value. And let&#8217;s buy into the whole decline-of-the-dollar </span><span class="Normal">thing as well. Buy oils. Buy gold. Now what? Sit back and </span><span class="Normal">wait for the world to end? What if the world does not end </span><span class="Normal">on your timetable? Where is your return? Is there any cash </span><span class="Normal">to take down and spend along the way? After all, you </span><span class="Normal">typically do not walk into the store and pay for the </span><br />
<span class="Normal">groceries with oil or gold. Loading up on oil and gold </span><span class="Normal">might be OK for a smaller investor, but you cannot manage </span><span class="Normal">a lot of money that way, certainly not over the long term. If </span><span class="Normal">you have a lot to lose, you have to diversify and manage it </span><span class="Normal">into a broader spread of equity commitments outside of just </span><span class="Normal">a few industrial or monetary basics.&#8221;</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><strong>Coho Partners, Ltd: &#8220;Safety is No Accident&#8221;</strong></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Let&#8217;s make a long story short. What is one of Peter&#8217;s </span><span class="Normal">favorite long-term investment ideas outside of the industrial </span><span class="Normal">and monetary basics? Autoliv Inc., of Stockholm, Sweden, </span><span class="Normal">and many other countries. (ALV and ALIV).</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Autoliv is a worldwide leader in automotive safety and </span><span class="Normal">safety systems. The company pioneered both seat belts and </span><span class="Normal">airbags, and offers the world&#8217;s finest technology in the field </span><span class="Normal">of automotive safety. All (as in the expression, &#8220;all&#8221;) of the </span><span class="Normal">leading auto manufacturers in the world are Autoliv </span><span class="Normal">customers. We will discuss that blue chip list below. </span><span class="Normal">Autoliv has 80 subsidiaries and joint ventures in 30 </span><span class="Normal">countries. Autoliv tests cars and products at 20 crash test </span><span class="Normal">tracks in nine countries, and employs about 40,000 people </span><br />
<span class="Normal">globally.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">My first reaction was a bit skeptical. An automotive </span><span class="Normal">products company, during a time when U.S. parts maker </span><span class="Normal">leader Delphi has just entered bankruptcy and General </span><span class="Normal">Motors and Ford are financial basket cases? &#8220;Don&#8217;t just </span><span class="Normal">think North America,&#8221; said Peter. &#8220;Think world. And don&#8217;t </span><span class="Normal">just think in terms of automobile parts. Think in terms of </span><span class="Normal">automotive safety.&#8221; That is, Autoliv is the worldwide leader </span><br />
<span class="Normal">in automotive safety systems. Peak Oil or not, there are </span><span class="Normal">about 1 million people killed every year around the world </span><span class="Normal">in auto traffic accidents. Thus, there is a compelling need </span><span class="Normal">for improved automotive safety.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Let&#8217;s follow the logic. Among other things, Peak Oil means </span><span class="Normal">higher gasoline prices. People with money will still buy </span><span class="Normal">their gas. People with less money will buy less gas. One </span><span class="Normal">way or another, however, this will make obsolete much of </span><span class="Normal">the world&#8217;s automotive stock. This is certainly true in North </span><span class="Normal">America, but is just as true in Europe, Asia, and every other </span><span class="Normal">region that will ever have to worry about liquid fuel supply.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Close to home, for example, Peak Oil certainly spells the </span><span class="Normal">end of most segments of the mass production of large, gas-</span><span class="Normal">guzzling vehicles. As The New York Times noted of an </span><span class="Normal">October sales slump on Nov. 1, 2005: &#8220;General Motors and </span><span class="Normal">Ford were hurt the most, with GM sales dropping 25.6% </span><span class="Normal">compared with October 2004 and Ford sales down 26.1%. </span><span class="Normal">Big SUVs, on which Detroit based much of its resurgence </span><span class="Normal">in the 1990s, did even worse, with sales of some of the </span><span class="Normal">largest (sport utility vehicles), the Ford Expedition and the </span><span class="Normal">Cadillac Escalade XLT among them, falling by half or </span><span class="Normal">more.&#8221;</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">This is just the beginning of the bad news for America&#8217;s </span><span class="Normal">traditional Big Three. Things will probably get worse for </span><span class="Normal">U.S. automakers, particularly if the U.S. economy goes into </span><span class="Normal">a recession next year, as many economic forecasters </span><span class="Normal">predict. But the fuel-efficient segments of the auto market </span><span class="Normal">are going strong, with long waiting lists for smaller cars </span><span class="Normal">with innovative drive systems. And auto markets are still </span><br />
<span class="Normal">holding their own in Europe, and they are cranking out </span><span class="Normal">product in Asia.</span></span></p>
<div><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Peak Oil is as much a cultural a phenomenon as it is a </span><span class="Normal">geological certainty. It is not a discrete event, but instead is </span><span class="Normal">one that will take decades to unfold. Peak Oil does not </span><span class="Normal">mean &#8220;no oil.&#8221; Oil from oil wells will be scarcer, and </span><span class="Normal">certainly more expensive. Liquid fuel from hydrogenated </span><span class="Normal">tar or heavy bitumen will become more common, and be </span><span class="Normal">more costly. Hand in hand with this, the world has an </span><span class="Normal">installed infrastructure that accommodates internal </span><span class="Normal">combustion motor vehicles. So it is important to keep in </span><br />
<span class="Normal">mind that nothing is going to disappear overnight. Yes, </span><span class="Normal">there will be a long period of transformation from what we </span><span class="Normal">have today to something else that will be very much </span><span class="Normal">different. I have written about this to some extent over the </span><span class="Normal">past year here in Whiskey &amp; Gunpowder, and I have a lot </span><span class="Normal">more to say on the subject.</span></span></span></span></div>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">But during the impending post-Peak Oil transformation, </span><span class="Normal">people will still drive cars. The cars may be smaller; have </span><span class="Normal">less steel content; and have smaller engines, if not entirely </span><span class="Normal">different powertrains, based on hybrid technology or </span><span class="Normal">batteries. There might be smaller seats, less legroom, less </span><span class="Normal">headroom, or smaller trunks and weaker air conditioners. </span><span class="Normal">But when you think about it, there will be more safety, and </span><br />
<span class="Normal">almost certainly not less safety, built into cars. In fact, </span><span class="Normal">smaller cars will in all likelihood be required to include a </span><span class="Normal">higher &#8220;safety&#8221; content. Customers will want it and </span><span class="Normal">governments will mandate it. Thus, people will pay for </span><span class="Normal">safety. And this gets us back to Autoliv.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Autoliv is a world leader in a basic commodity known as </span><span class="Normal">seat belt webbing. Autoliv has just announced plans to </span><span class="Normal">expand its seat belt webbing capacity in Shanghai, China, </span><span class="Normal">and to construct one of the world&#8217;s largest plants for </span><span class="Normal">manufacturing seat belt webbing. Eventually, the Shanghai </span><span class="Normal">plant will manufacture over 100 million meters of seat belt </span><span class="Normal">webbing per year. That is enough, by my calculation, to </span><span class="Normal">circle the world almost eight times.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">When it comes to high technology safety systems, Autoliv </span><span class="Normal">invented the side-impact airbag for chest protection, the </span><span class="Normal">&#8220;inflatable curtain&#8221; for head protection in side impacts, and </span><span class="Normal">the anti-whiplash seat, to mention just a few of the </span><span class="Normal">company&#8217;s latest contributions to automotive safety. </span><span class="Normal">Autoliv is currently developing rollover protection systems, </span><span class="Normal">night vision systems, and pedestrian protection systems.</span></span></p>
<p> </p>
<p></span></span></span></span></span></p>
<div><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Autoliv&#8217;s customer list includes General Motors, Ford, and </span><span class="Normal">DaimlerChrysler. It also includes European makers Volvo, </span><span class="Normal">Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes, Peugeot, Porsche, and Fiat. </span><span class="Normal">In Asia, Autoliv sells to Toyota, Honda, and Hyundai and </span><span class="Normal">is involved in joint ventures with several up-and-coming </span><br />
<span class="Normal">Chinese makers. In short, Autoliv sells to everybody who is </span><span class="Normal">anybody.</span></span></span></span></div>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Much of Autoliv&#8217;s pricing and business base is conducted </span><span class="Normal">in currencies other than the U.S. dollar, particularly the </span><span class="Normal">euro, which constitutes about 50% of gross sales. And </span><span class="Normal">Autoliv has a strong business base denominated in </span><span class="Normal">powerful Asian currencies such as the Japanese yen and </span><span class="Normal">Chinese yuan. Thus Autoliv&#8217;s dollar exposure is mitigated </span><span class="Normal">under this book of accounts. One could say that there is an </span><br />
<span class="Normal">element of a foreign currency &#8220;play&#8221; in Autoliv, because so </span><span class="Normal">much of its business is conducted outside of the declining-</span><span class="Normal">dollar sphere.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Autoliv has a market capitalization of about $4 billion. </span><span class="Normal">Three years ago, it sold on the Big Board for under $20 per </span><span class="Normal">share. It is currently trading in the range of $44. Its yearly </span><span class="Normal">high was $51.76, back in March. Its yearly low was $38.43, </span><span class="Normal">back in September. The stock declined during the third </span><span class="Normal">quarter 2005, but the company saw it as an opportunity to </span><span class="Normal">repurchase shares and spent about $133 million doing so, at </span><span class="Normal">an average price of about $44 each. Autoliv earns $3.50 per </span><span class="Normal">share, for a price-earnings ratio of 12.5. Autoliv has </span><span class="Normal">increased its dividend regularly since 2002 and just </span><span class="Normal">announced a quarterly increase to 32 cents per share, for a </span><span class="Normal">current yield of 2.9%. Autoliv debt is rated &#8220;A-, with a </span><span class="Normal">stable outlook&#8221; by Standard &amp; Poor&#8217;s.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">So here it is. We have a $4 billion international company </span><span class="Normal">that manufactures and sells automotive safety. Much of its </span><span class="Normal">business is nondollar denominated, with about 50% in </span><span class="Normal">euros alone. This company is very efficient and well </span><span class="Normal">managed and is a technology leader in a world that will be </span><span class="Normal">redesigning and replacing its transportation fleet in the </span><span class="Normal">coming years due to Peak Oil. The company is profitable, a </span><span class="Normal">good credit risk, and makes money and pays a dividend. Its </span><span class="Normal">stock is selling at a discount compared with the recent past, </span><span class="Normal">but management is buying back shares at and above the </span><span class="Normal">current market price.</span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal">Sound interesting? Buckle up.</span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">Until we meet again…</span><br />
<span class="Normal">Byron W. King<br />
</span></span><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">November 5, 2005</span></span></p>
<p> </p>
<p></span></span></p>
<p><span class="Normal"><span class="Normal">P.S. And many thanks to Peter Thompson and Coho </span><span class="Normal">Partners Ltd. for taking the time to call and discuss the </span><span class="Normal">idea.</span></span></p>
<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/coho-partners-ltd-crash-protection/">Coho Partners, Ltd: Crash Protection</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
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