Why Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. Stock Has Nowhere to Go But up

The latest annual shareholder’s meeting for Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (TSX:FFH) suggests veteran investor Prem Watsa is about to go on the offensive.

| More on:

Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (TSX:FFH) CEO Prem Watsa is ready to take the shackles off his holding company, and that’s good news if you’re a long-time shareholder. Here’s why.

Right there in the opening paragraph of the company’s annual shareholders letter, Prem Watsa highlights why Fairfax Financial is in great shape.

“We earned a record $1.7 billion in 2017, our book value per share increased 24.7% (adjusted for the $10 per share dividend paid) to $450 per share and we ended the year with a record $2.4 billion in cash and marketable securities in the holding company,” Watsa wrote. “Since we began in 1985, our book value per share has compounded at 19.5% annually while our common stock price has compounded at 18.1% annually.”

Warren Buffett, over the same period, has increased Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s (NYSE:BRK.A)(NYSE:BRK.B) book value per share and market value per share by  17.2% and 18.7%, respectively.

Has Watsa lost his touch?

So, while Watsa has increased book value per share by 230 basis points greater than Buffett over the same 32-year period, Berkshire Hathaway has seen its market value per share increase by 60 basis points more than Watsa on an annual basis. 

In the past five years, as Watsa hedged his equity portfolio against potential losses that never came, Fairfax’s book value per share essentially went sideways, growing by just 3.6%, or one-fifth its historical average.

I can remember investors wondering in 2002, a year in which Berkshire Hathaway stock lost 3.8% of its value compared to 22.1% for the S&P 500, if the Oracle of Omaha had lost his touch. Since that fateful question in 2002, Berkshire Hathaway stock has delivered nine years of double-digit returns out of 15, seven of which were greater than 20%. More importantly, only three out of 15 years had negative returns.

Watsa hasn’t lost his touch.

In fact, the company’s April 26 annual meeting gave the veteran investor an opportunity to tell shareholders about his plan of attack to move the company’s share price higher.

He now is aiming for 15% annual growth

On Fairfax’s slide presentation at its annual meeting was the objective to grow its book value per share.

“We expect to compound our mark-to-market book value per share over the long term by 15% annually by running Fairfax and its subsidiaries for the long-term benefit of customers, employees, shareholders and the communities where we operate — at the expense of short term profits if necessary,” Watsa proclaimed.

As Watsa likes to say, Fairfax’s share price follows its book value per share. If the company meets the 15% goal over the next five years, book value per share would be very close to $1,000, which would act as a huge catalyst to the Fairfax share price. 

Currently, Fairfax stock is trading around 1.3 times book value, less than the 1.4 multiple investors give Berkshire Hathaway, suggesting it could be very undervalued based on Watsa’s future plans for growth.

Buybacks speeding up

I’m not a fan of share repurchases, but if anyone can do them without paying too much, Watsa’s the person to do it.

Since 1985, the company has issued 29,5 million shares to make 50 acquisitions, which has increased net premiums written from $10 million in its first year to $10 billion in 2017, resulting in 1,000% growth.

During the same 32 years, it repurchased just 6.7 million shares, resulting in a net increase of 22.8 shares. Watsa now intends to use the company’s free cash flow — $2.3 billion at the end of 2017 — to aggressively buy back its shares. 

Fairfax’s insurance expansion will move from being deal driven to organic growth with the funds saved going to shareholders.

Buffett won’t pay more than 1.2 times book for his stock. It will be interesting to see how far Watsa will go to return capital to shareholders.

Nowhere to go but up

I’m being facetious when I say this, but some of the investments Watsa has made in 2017 could pay significant dividends for the company in three to five years, not the least of which is buying the Keg via Cara Operations Ltd. and rescuing the Canadian stores of Toys “R” Us.

This looks like a watershed moment where it moves from an insurance base to something more diversified.

In the end, Fairfax remains one of my top 10 stocks on the TSX.

Fool contributor Will Ashworth has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway (B shares). Fairfax is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

More on Investing

Oil industry worker works in oilfield
Energy Stocks

1 Canadian Energy Stocks Poised for Big Growth in 2026

This top Canadian energy stock could be the biggest winner from the recent global energy crisis. Here is why it…

Read more »

up arrow on wooden blocks
Dividend Stocks

This Canadian Dividend Stock Is Up 94% — and Still 1 of the Best on the TSX

This is a reasonably priced Canadian dividend stock for long-term wealth creation.

Read more »

Investor reading the newspaper
Stocks for Beginners

3 Resilient Canadian Stocks to Own in a Headline-Driven Market

These three Canadian stocks have their own momentum, driven by gold cash flow, logistics demand, and everyday packaging needs.

Read more »

Piggy bank on a flying rocket
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Companies That’ve Been Quietly Raising Their Dividend Payouts

Canadian Pacific Kansas City Railway (TSX:CP) increased its dividend 17.5%!

Read more »

man gives stopping gesture
Energy Stocks

Revealed: Here’s the Only Canadian Stock I’d Refuse to Sell

This Canadian stock stands out as a rare long‑term hold thanks to its stable cash flow, reliable dividends, and essential…

Read more »

top TSX stocks to buy
Dividend Stocks

2 TSX Dividend Stocks I’d Hold for the Next Decade

Two TSX dividend stocks stand out as buy-and-hold candidates for income-focused investors.

Read more »

Income and growth financial chart
Dividend Stocks

3 Top-Tier Canadian Stocks That Just Bumped Up Dividends Again

Add these three TSX dividend stocks to your portfolio if you seek stocks that increase payouts regularly.

Read more »

oil pumps at sunset
Energy Stocks

1 Canadian Energy Stock Quietly Positioning for a Big Year

A 6% yield and stronger U.S. production make this Canadian energy stock worth considering in 2026.

Read more »