Oil Stocks: Another Pastel Peepers

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One of the things we have in common with Warren Buffett is that we started our risk-taking career handicapping at racetracks. Buffett handicapped the horse races in Omaha, and I handicapped greyhound races near Portland at Multnomah Kennel Club in Gresham, Oregon. Buffett was too young to bet, so he created a tip sheet which he sold at the track. I was in college and most of the time was sending bets with my relatives while working swing shift at the Crown Zellerbach paper mill in Camas, Washington.

Many of you know that the beginning of our eight criteria for stock selection started with my five criteria for greyhound selection. My older cousins and I concluded at that time that five things really mattered in a greyhound race. First, each dog had a track record and you wanted to know who they had beaten before. The dog classes ran maiden races through class D-A. If you won a maiden race, you were promoted to the next level until you hit class A. Therefore, the first criteria for selection was class (who have you beaten before).

The second criteria was based on the shape of the racetrack and the speed which generates centrifugal force. The dogs could easily bang into each going around the first corner, ending their chances of success. The third was late speed. The dogs were bred to be quick and it was unusual for the quickest to have any late speed. The fourth criteria was post position, because the dogs had a tendency to prefer running close to the rail (very preferable) or around the outside of the track. An outside runner loved being in an outside box.

The fifth criteria was what I called the Janet Jackson rule (“What have you done for me lately?”). In other words, how the dog has been running in recent races. The fifth criteria brings us to the dog named Pastel Peepers and a summer of frustration in 1978. Pastel came to Portland, Oregon with a record of beating the best racers in Class A at a prestigious track in Palm Beach, Florida. We had studied the history of all the greyhounds entered and it was the class of the entire field.

However, some funny things can happen when you move a greyhound from a balmy, warm climate to the cool evenings in the Pacific Northwest. We began betting on Pastel Peepers in Class A and in those races, it failed miserably. Then it dropped to B class and failed to win there, and it finally dropped to C class. Unfortunately, I had to turn my attention back to heading for college. Therefore, in a season where my dad and I made very good net profits in handicapping, we lost more money on Pastel Peepers than any dog the whole season.

Once I got back to college, Pastel won a C class race, won a B race and got promoted to A. The dog won about 10 straight races and climbed back to its rightful position which we anticipated originally. All we did was lose more because we were too early.

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