cigar_butt_investing
Cigar butt investing is a colorful metaphor coined by Warren Buffett to describe the early investment style of his mentor, Benjamin Graham. Imagine walking down the street and finding a discarded cigar butt. It’s soggy and unappealing, but it has one good puff left in it. You can pick it up for free, take that final puff, and then throw it away. The investment equivalent is buying a deeply troubled, unloved company that is trading for a price so low it's almost absurd—often for less than the cash on its balance sheet after paying off all its debts. The goal is not to find a great business that will grow for decades; the goal is to get that “one last puff” of value when the market corrects the ridiculous price, or the company is liquidated. It's a gritty, quantitative, and unsentimental strategy focused on buying assets for pennies on the dollar.
The Bedrock of Classic Value Investing
This strategy is the original, unadulterated form of value investing as laid out by Benjamin Graham in his foundational texts, `Security Analysis` and `The Intelligent Investor`. It’s a purely numbers-driven game that intentionally ignores the qualitative aspects of a business, such as management quality, brand strength, or industry prospects. Graham’s logic was simple: if you could buy a business for significantly less than its assets were worth in a fire sale, you had an enormous `margin of safety`. Even if the business was terrible, you were protected by the raw value of its assets.
The Net-Net Formula
The holy grail for a cigar butt investor is a company known as a “net-net.” Graham defined this as a company whose stock market valuation was less than its `net-net working capital` (NNWC). The formula is: NNWC = (Current Assets - Total Liabilities) Essentially, an investor buys the company's most liquid assets (like cash and receivables) at a discount and gets all the long-term assets (like buildings, machinery, and land) for free. For example, if a company has a market value of $8 million but its NNWC is $10 million, you are buying a dollar's worth of easily sellable assets for just 80 cents. This was Graham's ultimate bargain.
How to Smoke a Cigar Butt
Finding and profiting from these stocks requires a specific, disciplined approach. It’s a far cry from the `buy-and-hold` strategy often associated with modern value investing.
The Quantitative Hunt
Cigar butt investors are bargain hunters who use stock screeners to search for statistically cheap companies. The primary criteria are:
- Price-to-Book Ratio: Searching for companies trading far below their `book value`, often below 0.5x.
- Price-to-NCAV Ratio: A more stringent test looking for stocks trading below their `net current asset value` (Current Assets - Total Liabilities - Preferred Stock). The “net-net” is the most extreme version of this.
These screens inevitably turn up a list of “ugly ducklings”—companies in dying industries, facing lawsuits, or consistently losing money. That’s the point. The value isn't in their future earnings but in the assets they hold right now.
The "One Puff" Exit Strategy
This is not a long-term relationship. The moment the stock price rises to reflect a more reasonable valuation—often near or at its `liquidation value`—the cigar butt investor sells and recycles the capital into the next opportunity. There is no emotional attachment. Because any individual company could fail and go to zero, the key to success is diversification. Graham recommended owning a basket of at least 30 of these stocks, expecting that the gains from the winners would far outweigh the losses from the few that go bankrupt.
Buffett's Great Pivot: Beyond the Butt
Warren Buffett began his career running the `Buffett Partnership`, where he masterfully executed this strategy and generated incredible returns. However, with the influence of his partner, `Charlie Munger`, he famously evolved his approach. Munger convinced him that, “It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.” Buffett moved on from cigar butts for a few key reasons:
- Scalability: Cigar butt opportunities are usually found in tiny, obscure companies. As Buffett’s investment fund grew into the billions, he couldn't invest meaningful amounts of money without dramatically moving the stock price. It's like trying to water an entire garden with a thimble.
- Quality Problems: Terrible businesses come with terrible management and a constant stream of problems that don't always appear on a `balance sheet`. Buffett famously said he’d rather “be in a good business with a bad manager than a bad business with a good manager, because the business's economics will win out every time.”
- The Power of Compounding: A single cigar butt provides a quick, limited gain. You then have the difficult task of finding another one. A great business, on the other hand, can be held for decades, compounding your capital at high rates of return year after year.
A Relic of the Past?
Today, finding true cigar butts in major markets like the United States is incredibly difficult. Armies of analysts, sophisticated data tools, and the evolution of `accounting standards` have made the market more efficient at pricing these statistical anomalies. However, the strategy isn't entirely extinct. Opportunities may still arise in:
- Less-followed markets, such as certain international exchanges or over-the-counter markets.
- Deep market crashes, when fear causes investors to sell everything indiscriminately, creating rare bargains.
- **Micro-cap` stocks that are simply too small for large institutional funds to consider.
For the average investor today, the cigar butt approach is more of a fascinating history lesson than a practical strategy. The modern value investing philosophy—focusing on high-quality businesses with durable competitive advantages—is a more reliable and scalable path for building long-term wealth.