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vandalic said:I am a strict Warren Buffett, Benjamin Graham and Philip Fisher value investor and I think telling you the stocks I consider and have purchased as "value" is providing the end of the tunnel without the reasoning and ideas behind each purchase. The process of value investing is like any procedure in business, you need the input, the steps in between and the output in order to determine why an purchase would be a value investment based on your own strict criteria. My criteria would be significantly different to anyone elses based on my own personal life, my beliefs, my mentors and life experiences. An investment philosophy must be best fit for you not a copy of what someone else has done and made significant income doing.
It's worth doing some reading on value investing and you'll be enlightened into which investments are worthwhile. If you take the time and read a lot you will learn a lot more then hearing the vague overview from others which may miss part of the process
- Josh
Mofra said:WB II,
I have one example of what I would call a value trade - bought MGX last year when suggested on another forum to research them, management gave an after tax forecast of 5 cps (they had carried over losses from previous years) and they were trading at 18c at the time. They did nothing for a while, they last traded at over 50c on Friday (although I had taken profits by this time, had a couple of ST plays as well).
vandalic said:I am a strict Warren Buffett, Benjamin Graham and Philip Fisher value investor and I think telling you the stocks I consider and have purchased as "value" is providing the end of the tunnel without the reasoning and ideas behind each purchase. The process of value investing is like any procedure in business, you need the input, the steps in between and the output in order to determine why an purchase would be a value investment based on your own strict criteria. My criteria would be significantly different to anyone elses based on my own personal life, my beliefs, my mentors and life experiences. An investment philosophy must be best fit for you not a copy of what someone else has done and made significant income doing.
It's worth doing some reading on value investing and you'll be enlightened into which investments are worthwhile. If you take the time and read a lot you will learn a lot more then hearing the vague overview from others which may miss part of the process
- Josh
Warren Buffet II said:Hi Guys,
I would like to know if there is anyone here who considers himself/herself a Value Investor?
Can you give an example of companies you have consider buying or have bought based on these thoughts?
Regards,
Around 1977, Altman developed jointly with a private financial firm (ZETA Services, Inc.) a revised seven-variable ZETA model based on a combined sample of 113 manufacturers and retailers. The ZETA model is allegedly "far more accurate in bankruptcy classification in years 2 through 5 with the initial year's accuracy about equal." However, the coefficients of the model are not specified (without retaining ZETA Services).
Re my discount rate: the cash component of my portfolio is kept in an Esanda online-only bank account which currently pays 5.55%pa. For all intents and purposes I regard that account as 'risk free' and hence use that account's interest rate for my discount rate. But of course anyone can use whatever discount rate is applicable to their circumstances....ie...10 year bond rate or whatever suits. As I don't invest in bonds I don't see it appropriate for me to use their rates as my discount rate.
Thus while there is nothing "wrong" with using your discount rate, you may be badly out of kilter at the "extremes" of market valuations.
If a stock is genuinely at an 'extreme' value (in terms of what would be accepted as a fair PER) then it would be fairly unlikely the stock would pass my returns test and NPV test as described in my earlier post - and with the weightings I have assigned to those tests (as described earlier), both of them failing would give me a 'Fail' overall in my fundamentals model (pass level is a score of 70%+). But if just one of the two tests failed then the stock could still achieve a 'Pass' overall (on fundamentals) depending on the results of the other 3 tests
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