Imagine a publicly-traded company. Now, imagine this company has a CEO who inherited the job from his father, who inherited it from his father. This CEO has absolute power, cannot be fired, and makes decisions based on an ideology that prioritizes self-reliance above all else, even if it means starving the company of revenue and resources. The company has never published a reliable financial report. Its factories are a state secret, its customer list is unknown, and any attempt to independently audit its books could land you in a corporate prison. Would you invest in this company? Of course not. You'd run in the other direction. In the world of nations, that “company” is North Korea (officially the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, or DPRK). It is the quintessential “black box” economy. It's an isolated, centrally-planned state governed by the Kim dynasty under a unique state ideology called Juche (self-reliance). For an investor, this means the fundamental building blocks of a stable, investable economy are entirely absent. There are no meaningful private property rights, no independent judiciary, no free flow of information, and no market-based allocation of resources. The entire economy is directed by the state for the benefit of the state and its leadership, making it opaque, unpredictable, and fundamentally hostile to outside capital.
“The most important quality for an investor is temperament, not intellect. You need a temperament that neither derives great pleasure from being with the crowd or against the crowd.” - Warren Buffett
This quote is particularly relevant when considering North Korea. The “crowd” will panic at the first sign of a missile test, selling off perfectly good assets in neighboring countries. The rational investor's temperament is what allows them to see past the noise and evaluate the true, underlying intrinsic_value.
For a value investor, North Korea is not a topic to be ignored simply because it's off-limits for direct investment. Its existence and actions have profound implications for three core pillars of value investing: risk management, rational decision-making, and identifying opportunity.
North Korea's utter failure on all these fronts serves as a powerful checklist for what to seek out elsewhere.
You cannot analyze North Korea itself as an investment. Instead, a value investor analyzes its potential impact on their portfolio and the broader market. This is an exercise in risk management and opportunity spotting.
A prudent investor should periodically assess their exposure to risks emanating from the Korean peninsula.
The goal of this analysis isn't to predict what North Korea will do. That is impossible. The goal is to be prepared, not surprised. Interpreting the results means answering these questions:
Let's consider two investors on a day when North Korea launches a new missile, causing the South Korean KOSPI index to fall 5%.
The difference is not intellect; it is preparation and temperament. Jin-Woo used North Korea's predictable unpredictability as an opportunity, while Dave became its victim.
While direct investment is not feasible, analyzing North Korea as a market factor presents a unique set of opportunities and overwhelming risks.