by bryanwbh on 8/14/18, 4:20 PM with 33 comments
by acconrad on 8/14/18, 4:59 PM
The rise of quants, ETFs, and instant information has largely arbitraged away value mispricings. So if it looks like a bargain, it's probably a value trap.
So where can you find value? Where the above things are not present. Quants work for big firms. Goldman Sachs can only make a dent if it does massive deals. As Buffett said, he could still do great things with $1mm AUM, but with billions, he can't make small plays anymore. So individuals can only find value where the big players (GC, ETFs) don't play. This means micro caps, foreign stocks (Japan comes to mind as a hot spot for value). The problem is two fold:
1. The above-mentioned pool is very small.
2. It's riskier.
So you have to do a ton of research to avoid the value trap mistake, often with way less information since these stocks aren't subject to the same 10K/10Q auditing that American stocks are.
Now you've researched something so much you're biased to believe it working since you've sunk so much time into it. And because you've sunk so much time you don't have the time to research the rest of the investment pool, so combined you see these value investors who are very concentrated in some highly-convicted bets. And thus, the ones that win, win big and can claim there is always value to be found even in a market dominated by momentum investing. The rest lose to value traps, and lose big.
So what's the takeaway? It still works. The low numbers in terms of P/E and P/B that are in books like The Intelligent Investor don't work. You have to relax those constraints quite a bit. And you can't be looking in the S&P 500.
I used to think I could do this as a hobby. And I did. But I think I got lucky based on the amount of time and research I did. To be demonstratively good at value investing time and time again requires robotic levels of dispassionate patience, and research that demands a full time job.
by mxschumacher on 8/14/18, 5:21 PM
Many famous value investors such as Bill Ackman, Bruce Berkowitz and David Einhorn have been getting absolutely killed in the market in the last several years.
It is difficult for me to imagine that this pendulum will never swing back. The combination of oligopolistic technology firms (platforms!), Quantitative Easing, low interest rates and more globalisation than ever certainly make for exciting times.
by aaavl2821 on 8/14/18, 7:22 PM
i didnt do value investing but took some classes and attended some talks, so i am not an expert, but from what i saw, things have changed a lot. it is harder to be a value investor today just because everything is so expensive. just like 50 years ago opportunities to buy businesses for less than book value became harder and harder to find, in today's market it is much harder to find value investments as defined by traditional valuation metrics like EV / EBITDA, ROIC, FCF / earnings yield, etc
Value oriented funds, and long / short equity funds in general, have been having a tough time. Too many funds popped up in the last 20 years and they are all competing for a few good investments. People are changing the definition of "value", though i am not sure if anyone has found a good one. Many people pitched FB and Google as value stocks, even though by traditional metrics they could not qualify as value investments
Bill Ackman, a prominent investor and sponsor of an investing contest that is a major part of the value investing curriculum, said if he was starting today he wouldnt be an investor, but would start a tech company. He wasn't the only HF manager who expressed that sentiment
by tim333 on 8/14/18, 5:50 PM
by devdimi on 8/15/18, 7:58 AM
by finfun234 on 8/14/18, 11:56 PM
http://shareseer.com/today/insiders
http://shareseer.com/today/filings I’m trying to learn what are your pain points with your investment research process ? Is this useful? And feature requests?
by rubidium on 8/14/18, 6:27 PM
Buffett's bio by Lowenstein, "Buffett: Making of an American Capitalist".
A collection of Buffett's writings in: http://www.monitorinvestimentos.com.br/download/The%20Essays...
by btian on 8/14/18, 4:32 PM