|
| Latest Web News |
Google Selling Video Ads On The Web The click-to-play video advertisements go on sale beginning today, and will be available to advertisers in the US, Canada, and Japan at launch. Visitors to sites in Google's network of AdWords publishers will have complete control over the video ad experience...
Google Secrecy A Blessing And Curse Other than the legally mandated SEC filings, only the very top of the Google leadership knows just how the company operates. The LA Times delivered the most apt commentary on Google...
Google Domains Not Catching Fire Beyond the vaunted minimalist Google home page, the next nineteen Google domains barely account for 20 percent of visits to all things ending in Google.com.
Doc Searls Closes Syndicate Conference The close of the Syndicate Conference in New York came with Searls' keynote address, where he touched on the issue of "The Return to Producerism."
Amanda Congdon Talks Syndicating Videoblogs At Syndicate NY Video blogs shouldn't be called "Internet TV"; Congdon said that completely devalues them. "They are a totally unique video experience, usually more casual."
Yahoo! Finance Badges Detailed Another component in Yahoo's syndication strategy will enable publishers to embed financial information into their sites and blogs. Mani Kulasooriya from Yahoo said the toughest part of creating Yahoo! Finance Badges was not the technical side.
Google Notebook Goes Live
As promised at Google's Press Day event last week, its Notebook service from Google Labs has been turned on in beta for users to try. Firefox users will have an easy time of adding...
Justice Unworried About IE7 Search Google had complained to US and European antitrust regulators about Microsoft including a search box with MSN Search as the default in Internet Explorer 7, but the Department of Justice had no problems with the feature.
Microsoft Targeting Google, Maybe Frequent media stories that aim at pushing Microsoft and Google into an all-out battle royale don't really hit the mark according to Microsoft's CEO.
Can The FCC Save Net Neutrality? The chief complaints of the telecommunications industry regarding the heated Network Neutrality debate are that regulation limits their ability to compete...
Schmidt: Google Has Just Begun Google's CEO Eric Schmidt told media attendees at Press Day that search is the inevitable outcome of what is and will happen on the Internet.
Google Fills California Tax Coffers All of that insider selling by Google insiders like Eric Schmidt, Larry Page, and Sergey Brin helped boost the state's take in personal income tax.
Microsoft Mapping The Real-Time World Google may want to organize the world's information, but Microsoft wants to let you know how long you're going to have to wait for a table at Red Lobster on Friday evening.
Windows Live Messenger Offers VoIP Microsoft will partner with Verizon to deliver PC to phone calling services as part of Live Messenger's new features being made available in the public beta release.
Google Threatens Wireless Market A mixture of free wireless broadband connections and voice over Internet protocol applications will leave the mobile network market in the United States a smoldering unmourned wreck consigned to the scrapheap, but only in major cities.
|
|
|
Recent Articles |
Google Sticks With Stock Structure... CNET has details of Google's annual shareholder meeting.
Stock Trading - What Every Investor Should Know Every investor has his own take on "wise" investing. These suggestions come from experience, and are meant for the momentum investor rather than those who "buy and forget".
Investing Google’s $10 Billion Recently, CNN.com ran an article titled "What should Google do with its $10 billion war chest?" It mentioned that Google's $10 billion coffer is predicted to grow to $12 billion by the end of 2006.
Higher Returns With Entrepreneurial Investing Long-term investing in the stock market can offer a passive return around 5-8% if you remain invested for 30 years; but, unfortunately, that return is before taxes and inflation.
Primer on Socially Responsible Investing
Socially responsible investing (SRI), or sometimes known
as ethical investment, is an investment strategy...
Poor Paul Allen Robert Cringely has a fascinating read about Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen. He discusses how Allen could have wound up with...
A
Legal RSS Feed?
Law.com released its own RSS reader on Monday, named NewsPoint.
A free download, the application will come with preloaded
content from Law.com and the Law.com...
AOL
Changes Name To AOL
America Online has settled its identity crisis and accepted
its nickname. "My name is…AOL!" said the company...
Option Trading Tip - Covered Call Cashflow Writing Covered Calls is a conservative strategy where you buy a stock that you would like to invest in and then write a call option against that stock.
Google Accidentally Reveals Revenue Prediction Google accidentally left in notes that discussed predictions of revenue for the next year in the Powerpoint for last week's Analyst Day. As a result, Google had to file a Form 8-K disclosure report with the SEC.
Google Disclosures And Fallout The search advertising company accidentally provided financial guidance to analysts before excising it from the presentation that was made available online.
Google Coos To Analysts, Market Hearts Flutter Executives from the Googleplex whispered sweetly into the ears of industry analysts and convinced them growth opportunities do indeed exist for the search advertising company.
Investors Want Guidance From Google The Wall Street Journal is running an article on how many analysts expect (or at least wish) Google to break from its early promises and actually provide investor guidance at its first Analyst Day this Thursday.
Greenspan Still Angry Over MySpace Deal Ex-Intermix CEO Brad Greenspan still hasn't gotten over the sale of his former company, the parent firm of MySpace, to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.
Yahoo Finance Paying Off Yahoo added several columnists to its Finance site last year to provide content beyond the stock charts and hard news featured on the site, and still holds a firm lead in visitors for its category.
How To Dissect Mutual Fund Returns While total and compound annual returns are useful, savvy investors will look deeper, using a variety of metrics, to get a more complete picture on mutual fund performance.
|
|
05.23.06 What Is Value Investing?
By
Geoff Gannon
Different sources define value investing differently. Some say value investing is the investment philosophy that favors the purchase of stocks that are currently selling at low price-to-book ratios and have high dividend yields.
Others say value investing is all about buying stocks with low P/E ratios. You will even sometimes hear that value investing has more to do with the balance sheet than the income statement.
In his 1992 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, Warren Buffet wrote:
"We think the very term ‘value investing' is redundant. What is ‘investing' if it is not the act of seeking value at least sufficient to justify the amount paid? Consciously paying more for a stock than its calculated value - in the hope that it can soon be sold for a still-higher price - should be labeled speculation (which is neither illegal, immoral nor - in our view - financially fattening)."
"Whether appropriate or not, the term ‘value investing' is widely used. Typically, it connotes the purchase of stocks having attributes such as a low ratio of price to book value, a low price-earnings ratio, or a high dividend yield. Unfortunately, such characteristics, even if they appear in combination, are far from determinative as to whether an investor is indeed buying something for what it is worth and is therefore truly operating on the principle of obtaining value in his investments. Correspondingly, opposite characteristics - a high ratio of price to book value, a high price-earnings ratio, and a low dividend yield - are in no way inconsistent with a ‘value' purchase." Buffett's definition of "investing" is the best definition of value investing there is. Value investing is purchasing a stock for less than its calculated value.
Tenets of Value Investing
1) Each share of stock is an ownership interest in the underlying business. A stock is not simply a piece of paper that can be sold at a higher price on some future date. Stocks represent more than just the right to receive future cash distributions from the business. Economically, each share is an undivided interest in all corporate assets (both tangible and intangible) - and ought to be valued as such.
2) A stock has an intrinsic value. A stock's intrinsic value is derived from the economic value of the underlying business.
3) The stock market is inefficient. Value investors do not subscribe to the Efficient Market Hypothesis. They believe shares frequently trade hands at prices above or below their intrinsic values. Occasionally, the difference between the market price of a share and the intrinsic value of that share is wide enough to permit profitable investments. Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing, explained the stock market's inefficiency by employing a metaphor. His Mr. Market metaphor is still referenced by value investors today:
"Imagine that in some private business you own a small share that cost you $1,000. One of your partners, named Mr. Market, is very obliging indeed. Every day he tells you what he thinks your interest is worth and furthermore offers either to buy you out or sell you an additional interest on that basis. Sometimes his idea of value appears plausible and justified by business developments and prospects as you know them. Often, on the other hand, Mr. Market lets his enthusiasm or his fears run away with him, and the value he proposes seems to you a little short of silly."
| Enter
to Win a FREE iPod Nano or 3 Months of Channel Management
- Click Here |
|
4) Investing is most intelligent when it is most businesslike. This is a quote from Benjamin Graham's "The Intelligent Investor". Warren Buffett believes it is the single most important investing lesson he was ever taught. Investors ought to treat investing with the seriousness and studiousness they treat their chosen profession. An investor should treat the shares he buys and sells as a shopkeeper would treat the merchandise he deals in. He must not make commitments where his knowledge of the "merchandise" is inadequate. Furthermore, he must not engage in any investment operation unless "a reliable calculation shows that it has a fair chance to yield a reasonable profit".
5) A true investment requires a margin of safety. A margin of safety may be provided by a firm's working capital position, past earnings performance, land assets, economic goodwill, or (most commonly) a combination of some or all of the above. The margin of safety is manifested in the difference between the quoted price and the intrinsic value of the business. It absorbs all the damage caused by the investor's inevitable miscalculations. For this reason, the margin of safety must be as wide as we humans are stupid (which is to say it ought to be a veritable chasm). Buying dollar bills for ninety-five cents only works if you know what you're doing; buying dollar bills for forty-five cents is likely to prove profitable even for mere mortals like us.
What Value Investing Is Not
Value investing is purchasing a stock for less than its calculated value. Surprisingly, this fact alone separates value investing from most other investment philosophies.
True (long-term) growth investors such as Phil Fisher focus solely on the value of the business. They do not concern themselves with the price paid, because they only wish to buy shares in businesses that are truly extraordinary. They believe that the phenomenal growth such businesses will experience over a great many years will allow them to benefit from the wonders of compounding. If the business' value compounds fast enough, and the stock is held long enough, even a seemingly lofty price will eventually be justified.
Some so-called value investors do consider relative prices. They make decisions based on how the market is valuing other public companies in the same industry and how the market is valuing each dollar of earnings present in all businesses. In other words, they may choose to purchase a stock simply because it appears cheap relative to its peers, or because it is trading at a lower P/E ratio than the general market, even though the P/E ratio may not appear particularly low in absolute or historical terms. Should such an approach be called value investing? I don't think so. It may be a perfectly valid investment philosophy, but it is a different investment philosophy.
Value investing requires the calculation of an intrinsic value that is independent of the market price. Techniques that are supported solely (or primarily) on an empirical basis are not part of value investing. The tenets set out by Graham and expanded by others (such as Warren Buffett) form the foundation of a logical edifice.
Although there may be empirical support for techniques within value investing, Graham founded a school of thought that is highly logical. Correct reasoning is stressed over verifiable hypotheses; and causal relationships are stressed over correlative relationships. Value investing may be quantitative; but, it is arithmetically quantitative.
There is a clear (and pervasive) distinction between quantitative fields of study that employ calculus and quantitative fields of study that remain purely arithmetical. Value investing treats security analysis as a purely arithmetical field of study. Graham and Buffett were both known for having stronger natural mathematical abilities than most security analysts, and yet both men stated that the use of higher math in security analysis was a mistake. True value investing requires no more than basic math skills.
Contrarian investing is sometimes thought of as a value investing sect. In practice, those who call themselves value investors and those who call themselves contrarian investors tend to buy very similar stocks.
Let's consider the case of David Dreman, author of "The Contrarian Investor". David Dreman is known as a contrarian investor. In his case, it is an appropriate label, because of his keen interest in behavioral finance. However, in most cases, the line separating the value investor from the contrarian investor is fuzzy at best. Dreman's contrarian investing strategies are derived from three measures: price to earnings, price to cash flow, and price to book value. These same measures are closely associated with value investing and especially so-called Graham and Dodd investing (a form of value investing named for Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, the co-authors of "Security Analysis").
Conclusions
Ultimately, value investing can only be defined as paying less for a stock than its calculated value, where the method used to calculate the value of the stock is truly independent of the stock market. Where the intrinsic value is calculated using an analysis of discounted future cash flows or of asset values, the resulting intrinsic value estimate
is independent of the stock market. But, a strategy that is based on simply buying stocks that trade at low price-to-earnings, price-to-book, and price-to-cash flow multiples relative to other stocks is not value investing. Of course, these very strategies have proven quite effective in the past, and will likely continue to work well in the future.
The magic formula devised by Joel Greenblatt is an example of one such effective technique that will often result in portfolios that resemble those constructed by true value investors. However, Joel Greenblatt's magic formula does not attempt to calculate the value of the stocks purchased.
So, while the magic formula may be effective, it isn't true value investing. Joel Greenblatt is himself a value investor, because he does calculate the intrinsic value of the stocks he buys. Greenblatt wrote "The Little Book That Beats The Market" for an audience of investors that lacked either the ability or the inclination to value businesses.
You can not be a value investor unless you are willing to calculate business values. To be a value investor, you don't have to value the business precisely - but, you do have to value the business.
About the Author: Geoff Gannon writes a daily value investing blog and produces a twice weekly (half hour) value investing podcast at Gannon on Investing
|