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Mario Gabelli

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Mario Gabelli

Mario Joseph Gabelli (born June 19, 1942) is an American stock investor, investment advisor and financial analyst. He is the founder, chairman, and CEO of Gabelli Asset Management Company Investors (GAMCO Investors) a $30 billion dollar global investment firm headquartered in Rye, New York. Forbes magazine's 2006 Forbes 400 rankings listed as #346 on the list of wealthiest Americans and estimated his net worth at $1.0 billion.

Gabelli founded his firm in 1977 as a broker-dealer, and the company has since grown into the diversified financial services corporation. Gabelli does not receive salary, bonuses, or stock options, but is paid a management-fee-based compensation. He was paid $55 million in 2004 [1] and $55.5 million in 2005.

Gabelli is a leading proponent of the Graham-Dodd school of security analysis and pioneed the application of Graham and Dodd's principles to the analysis of domestic, cash generating, franchise companies in a very wide range of industries. His proprietary Private Market Value methodology is now an analytical standard in the value investing community. [citation needed]

Gabelli is a Chartered Financial Analyst, a member and former officer of the New York Society of Security Analysts, the New York Society of Auto Analysts and the Entertainment Analysts Group of New York.

Gabelli has been a frequent commentator on CNBC and CNN, and has appeared six times on Louis Rukeyser's Wall Street. Gabelli is often written about in the financial print media including Institutional Investor, Business Week, Fortune, Forbes, Money and Changing Times. He has also written articles for investment publications such as the Financial Analysts Handbook.

Early life and education

Gabelli, The son of Italian immigrants, was born in The Bronx and went to Fordham Preparatory School there. He has said he read market reports for fun when he was very young and that he bought his first stock when he was 13 years old.

Gabelli won a scholarship and graduated from Fordham University summa cum laude. He received his Master of Business Administration degree from Columbia Business School. At Columbia be was taught by Roger Murray, noted value investing professor and co-author of the Fourth Edition of Security Analysis, The Graham & Dodd Value Investing Bible. Gabelli and his Firm later launched the Graham & Dodd, Murray, Greenwald Award for Distinguished Value Investors. This award is presented yearly at his Annual Client Symposium.

Value Investing - The Early Years

After graduation, Gabelli accepted a position at Loeb Rhodes & Co. as a farm equipment and auto parts analyst and later media and broadcasting. Gabelli was putting into practice the theory of value investing that he learned at Columbia. He rated companies not by earnings but cash flow, analyzing a firm in great detail to calculate what he called private-market value: not the share price at which a stock was selling on an exchange but the price per share someone would be willing to pay in order to buy the whole company. This method would be widely used in the 1980s in leveraged buyouts, in which a public company's managers would buy their company, or at least a considerable part of it, and take it private. The calculations employed were often not the same as the standard valuation measures for public companies. This methodology was later trademarked as The Gabelli Private Varket Value with a Catalyst Methodology.

Super Mario is Born

In 1976 Gabelli formed Gabelli & Co., a brokerage house, with borrowed funds and money he had accumulated trading his own account. Soon after Gabelli formed Gabelli Investors ( later GAMCO Investors) to manage money for clients. After sending a memo to a Barron's editor touting a company he fancied, Chris-Craft Industries, Inc., Gabelli landed on the cover of this financial weekly. By 1981 Gamco had 81 accounts and was managing about $33 million. Despite the rocky economy and stagnant stock market or the late 70's and early 80's, Gabelli made money for his clients each year. While investors were seeking to get in on the ground floor of a companies growth, Gabelli preferred to cash in on a company's death. During the next few years he invested in or recommended companies that were taken over by other firms of privatized.

By the mid 1980's Gabelli was managing over $350 million in client assets and compounding returns at more than 35 percent per year. While Business Week was touting the "Death of Equities" on it's cover, Gabelli was quoted as saying "I dont need a rising market to bail me out." Gabelli's firm was doing all its own research, usually with the idea of identifying firms that might be candidates for leveraged buyouts: those with characteristics such as a large amount of cash on hand, underlying assets such as real estate, or a large block of stock in the hands of a company founder with no children. He also looked for companies in industries where new competition was difficult and cash flow was high. Once Gabelli selected such a stock, he was willing to wait for years until it appreciated. He began buying Cowles Communications, Inc., for example, in 1977 at $14 a share and eventually became its biggest stockholder. In 1984 the company (now Cowles Media Co.) was privatized at $46 a share, for a total payoff to Gabelli's clients of $33 million. Another media winner was Chris-Craft, whose BHC Communications, Inc. achieved almost a sixfold pretax gain in income over six years in the 1980s and in the 1990s assembled its own network, United Television. The relentless Gabelli was visiting about 50 companies a year to gain information and meeting the managers of more than 100 other corporations annually, as well as getting together with other portfolio managers to discuss ideas and reading about 20 trade journals, two or three newspapers, and a number of industry and company reports. He also was writing research reports for his brokerage customers and portfolio-manager and other professional-investor clients. "I read annual reports instead of novels," Gabelli told Jerry Edgerton of Money in 1986. As a narrowly focused investor with large holdings in a few companies, he was able to bring influence to bear on company management.

Between 1978 and 1985 Gabelli's portfolios outperformed the Standard & Poor's index of 500 stocks each year and more than doubled the results of this S&P index in five of those years. Between 1977 and 1988 Gamco Investors' assets appreciated at an annual compounded rate of 28 percent, a rate exceeded by very few money managers. This money management entity had never lost money over a year and had met Gabelli's objective of ten percent annual return after taxes and inflation in all but two years. Gamco Investors' equity assets, flush with cash invested by company pension funds, reached $1.6 billion in 1986.

The Gabelli Mutual Funds

Gabelli's first investment vehicle for the general public, The Gabelli Asset Fund, launched in March of 1986 as a no-load fund requiring a minimum of $25,000 to invest. Later, and today, this Fund is available for a minimum investment of $1,000 and accepts IRA investments without a minimum. The Asset Fund was later followed on by The Gabelli Equity Trust, a Closed-end fund which, at the time, was the largest equity offering on the NYSE. By the end of 1988 Gabelli's firm had three mutual funds--two run by himself--with combined assets of $650 million.

Fund Manager of the Year

In 1997, when ten Gabelli equity funds averaged a return of 31.7 percent, the best of any U.S. mutual fund group, Gabelli was honored by Morningstar, Inc. as the domestic equity fund manager of the year.

The Third Decade

By 1998 Gabelli Asset Management Inc. was managing $16.3 Billion. In February of 1999 the company went public selling 6 million shares, or about twenty percent of the common stock at $17.50 per share.

Personal life

Notable membership

  • A Governor of the American Stock Exchange;
  • A member of The Board of Overseers of Columbia University Graduate School of Business;
  • A member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University;
  • A member of the Board of Trustees of Roger Williams University, where the Gabelli School of Business is named after him;
  • A member of the Board of Directors of the Bruce Museum;
  • A former member of the Board of Trustees of Fordham Preparatory School;
  • Trustee of the Winston Churchill Foundation of the United States, which encourages scientific and technological talent by providing scholarships and fellowships to outstanding graduate students and professors to study and do research at Churchill College, Cambridge, England;
  • A former Trustee of the Dr. I. Fund Foundation, Hawthorne, New York,
  • Trustee of the E. L. Wiegand Foundation in Reno, Nevada, which supports programs for education, health, community and cultural affairs;
  • Chairman, Patron's Committee for the Immaculate Conception School, the largest parochial school in the Bronx, with more than 800 students;
  • Former Commissioner of the New York State Christopher Columbus Quincentenary Commission;
  • Recipient of the Columbus Citizens Foundation Award for Business and Education in 1994;
  • Recipient of the 1996 Ellis Island Medal of Honor for Business Leaders;
  • Cavaliere of the Italian Legions of Merit.

See also

List of personalities associated with Wall Street

Notes

  1. ^ a b forbes, editors (2006 November). "#346 Mario Gabelli". Forbes 400. Forbes. Retrieved 2007-02-03. {{cite news}}: |first= has generic name (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)

References

On the Web