Value Investing Principles
Value Investing Principles
Value Investing
Founding Fathers of Value Investing were professors Benjamin Graham and David Dodd of the Columbia Business School The Bibles
The Intelligent Investor Securities Analysis
Value Investing
Value Investing
Involves the application of strategic analysis to finance Rely on what is knowable not on the unknown Its all about picking your races and picking your horses
Valuation
Assets Earnings Power Value Franchise
Review
Key Issues Collateral Evidence Personal Biases
Risk Management
Margin of Safety Some Diversification Patience Default Strategy
Value Investing
In the investment business everyone thinks they have an edge It is well established that the cheap / ugly / obscure actually outperform the market over long periods of timeWarren Buffett Low Market to Book Value = Outperformance Small and cheap stocks outperform Avoid the expensive: want to buy boring and cheap
Systemic Biases
Institutional Biases
Herd Mentality to minimize deviations Window dressing money managers The constant hunt for blockbusters Next Big Thing
Individual Biases
Loss Aversion Hindsight Bias Lottery ticket mentality Buying the dream and getting rich quick People shy away from the ugly to a high degree People have more confidence in their judgment than justified Hindsight not adjusted very much People have an exaggerated sense of good news
Behavioral Finance
On the institution side, fund managers have a tendency to mimic and copy one another The astute investor can take advantage of institutional and individual biases and tendencies to their own benefit To be a good investor, you have to be good at estimating value
Traditional Approaches
Traditional MBA Corporate Finance and DCF Model
Estimate cash flows over five years or more (expected cash flows) Estimate the cost of capital for the firm Adopt a terminal growth rate Estimate terminal cost of capital Add it all back to derive value
Traditional Approach
Big Assumption If you knew for sure the cash flows and the cost of capital into the distant future, then the DCF model will work But if you dont know.then this may not be the wisest approach
DCF Limitations
DCF takes good information and combines it with bad information to predict the future
Add it all together and you get bad information
DCF Limitations
With the multiples or DCF method you are making big assumptions about the future. Plug in your numbers, turn the crank and spit out a value for the company. The assumptions are almost always arbitrary
Differing Approaches
Traditional Approach Questions: Profit Rate 6% Economically viable? Cost of Capital 10% Investment / Sales 60% Profit Rate 9% Growth Rate 7%
Strategic Approach Questions: Is the industry economically viable? Are there any competitive advantages? Is there free entry? Does the Firm enjoy a sustainable competitive advantage? If the competitive advantage is stable the firm grows with the industry
Reliability Dimension
Next most important value component, EPV or Earnings Power Value EPV will reveal the average distributable earnings of the firmthis can be calculated
On Valuing Growth
The third component of value is growth For many companies, the high market price / valuations are related to future growth In general, value investors will not pay for growthprofitable growth is uncertain If growth is forecasted, there better be a moat built around that growth to protect it from potential entrants
Asset Cash A/R Inventories PP&E Product Portfolio Customer Relationships Organization License & Franchises Subsidiaries
Value Book Book + adjustment for uncollectibles Book + LIFO adjustment Original Cost plus adjustment to renew Years R&D expense Years SG&A Present market values Private market value
Once you have completed valuing the assets, make sure you have correctly included the intangible assets as well (customer relationships, new product development, brand recognition) Add up the assets and subtract liabilities to come up with net asset value
EPV
EPV Company = EPV Business Operations + excess net assets (cash, real estate legacy costs)
Value of Growth
When looking at GrowthProceed with extreme caution This is the least reliable value indicator and it is highly sensitive to assumptions Ask: does the growth have any value at all? In practice, growth requires additional investment The more investment, the less distributable cash flow The key when evaluating growth is the existence of barriers to entry and competitive advantage Growth with no barriers = No Value to Growth
Growth Dilemma
Crappy management is on a mission to grow growth will kill you because it wastes valuable resources Competitive markets: no barriers, investment will lead to break even Growth has value if there are competitive barriers in place