Value investing, as defined by Benjamin Graham, is a strategy of buying securities only when their market prices are significantly below the calculated intrinsic value. It entails buying what is safe and cheap with little or no concentration on forecasts of relatively near-term flows. Safety is measure by strong financial position, by the quality of the resources. The gap between the value and the price is referred to as the “margin of safety.”
The process consists of:
Fundamental investors pursue one of two approaches:
If either of these investors find that their estimates of future earnings or other important variables exceed expectations, they would make a purchase.
Historical records confirm that over extended periods of time, value investing strategies has returned better results than the market or alternate methods in almost all periods and market types.
How are stocks valued?
Market value per share (current stock price), is vastly different than the company’s real intrinsic capital value, known as book value per share. Stock price represents price agreed on by buyers and sellers at that particular moment (highest that a buyer will pay, lowest that a seller will accept). Book value per share is the capital value of the company; total net worth minus intangible assets (such as goodwill), divided by the number of outstanding common stock. Stock price should always be compared to book value per share. A close relationship could be a good opportunity.
Price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is one of the most popular and important tests used by investors. It shows how the market views a particular stock based on earnings.
You can conduct the following test to determine whether a value portfolio produced better than average returns:
---
Ready to invest in digital marketing for your business? Let's work together to create a plan designed around optimizing your business directory listings, while incorporating search engine optimization (SEO), content marketing, search engine marketing, lead generation and website design to ensure that your accounting practice is optimized to help you reach your goals.