This stock just hit an all-time high. And itâs as cheap as ever. [Read this article on our website.]( [Smart Money Monday]  Feb 27, 2023 My Top Smart Money Monday Pick for 2023 As a bargain-hunting stock picker, seeing a stock you like hit an all-time high usually means itâs time to sell. Or, at the very least, you donât add to the position. Itâs rare, but there are times when a stock is a buy even after hitting all-time highs. My top pick in Smart Money Monday for 2023 is one of those rare instances. Again, I like to buy things on sale. A typical rule of thumb is to look for stocks hitting a new low. That tells me itâs almost certainly hated and, therefore, potentially cheap. Todayâs idea doesnât fit that rule of thumb. Despite hitting all-time highs, itâs actually cheaper and more compelling here than at any time in the past few years. Ed DâAgostinoâs One-on-One with Keith Fitz-Gerald:
 Stream Before It Comes Offline In the exclusive interview, Keith answered as many reader questions as he could in the time available. Hereâs a brief rundown of the topics and names Keith covered: - Keith described his investing framework in detail, including the tools he uses to weigh one opportunity vs. another.
- He also covered the reason why, among 600,000+ tradable securities worldwide, only 50 truly matter for most portfolios.
- Keith gave his thoughts on Apple, Tesla, Microsoft, Peloton, Goldman Sachs, defense tech names... cybersecurity... AI... and more. It was a wide-ranging conversation and not one to miss. [Click here to stream for free, while itâs still available.](
(From our partners.) Berkshire of Canada Admittedly, itâs a bit cliché to call a company the âBerkshire Hathaway of Fill in the Blankâ or âThe Next Berkshire Hathaway.â And as weâve seen, itâs downright disastrous to call someone the next Warren Buffett. Fortune magazine applied that label to accused crypto fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried. It did the same for SPAC king and VC promoter Chamath Palihapitiya. Many of his SPACs are down 90% or more. But before Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway were household names, there was one guy in Canada following his playbook: Prem Watsa. Watsa is the CEO, founder, and largest shareholder of Canadian insurance conglomerate Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (FRFHF). I first wrote about it [here](, and itâs up 56% over that time frame. Itâs beaten Berkshire Hathaway over that same time frame as well. Dodging the Bond Bubble Prem Watsa is a tried-and-true value investor. For him, âcheapâ is based on current in-place numbers. He doesnât buy story stocks or stocks that will be profitable âsomeday.â Heâs also avoided bonds, one of the worldâs largest asset classesâand for good reason. The yields on bonds, or fixed income, have been low for over a decade⦠1% or 2% returns for long-duration bonds just wasnât attractive. Instead, Watsa kept investable funds in cash or extremely low-duration bonds that matured in less than two years. By contrast, insurance peer Chubb Ltd. (CB) had an average duration of closer to four years for 2020. It may not seem like much, but thatâs a lot riskier than it looks. In short, Watsa refused to chase yield. And now, that decision is paying off. Higher interest rates work in Fairfaxâs favor here. Itâs printing money on low-risk bonds. Its fixed income book today is $38 billion dollars. Over the next two years, it should earn $1.5 billion per year in interest income. Big Picture Fairfax doesnât just make money on interest income. It also makes money in insurance, with insurance operations generating around $1 billion per year in operating income. Then, there are other equity investments and wholly owned businesses inside of Fairfax. That bucket should generate another $1 billion in operating income or investment gains. Backing out the interest expense, taxes, and corporate overhead, you can easily get to $100 per share in earnings from Fairfax over the next two years and beyond. $100 in earnings per share⦠thatâs easily worth 10â15 times earnings, right? Insurance giant Chubb, which I mentioned above, trades for 16 times earnings. Fairfax, however, isnât even close. On todayâs $664 share price, itâs trading at less than 7X earnings. Thatâs much too cheap. Thereâs a lot more going on inside Fairfax. But right now, the market appears to like simple, easy-to-follow stories. And at less than 7X earnings, itâs easy to see that Fairfax is a very cheap stock. Thanks for reading, [Thompson Clark] âThompson Clark
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[The simple question to prepare your portfolio for (almost) anything]( [Thompson Clark]Thompson Clark is a small-cap expert and value-focused investor with nearly a decade of experience in financial publishing. Thompson graduated from the Goizueta Business School at Emory University in 2010 with a focus in finance and accounting. He lives in North Carolina. He is the editor of Mauldin Economicsâ free research service, [Smart Money Monday](. Don't let friends miss this timely insightâ
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