|
What is value investing?
Dear Dollar Diva,
What is value investing?
Value investing is investing in good companies when
their prices are in the sewer. The operative word here is "good"
because value investors tend to buy and hold. They hate paying broker
commissions and taxes.
The market often kisses off a good company when its
quarterly earnings are disappointing, or it's slapped with a mega
lawsuit. The company's stock price drops because nobody wants to
buy it, and value investors go bottom fishing, scooping up the cheap
shares in anticipation of a future windfall. The big hurt comes
if the market stays out of love with the stock. Even if the company
is profitable, the only number that really counts when you want
to sell is what the market is willing to pay.
Here are some of the things the value investor looks
for in a company:
- Low
price/earnings ratio -- this will exclude most Internet companies
- Bad news about a company -- when everyone
else sells, driving the price down, the value investor buys
- Big dividends -- dividends are money in the
bank
- Earnings -- this also will exclude most Internet
companies
You don't have to be a Dow Jones Industrial Average
company to be considered by a value investor, but you do have to
have a good track record.
| Dow Jones Industrial Average
Companies |
| Aluminum Co. of America |
Intel Corp. |
| American Express |
IBM |
| AT&T |
International Paper |
| Boeing Co. |
J. P. Morgan |
| Caterpillar Inc. |
Johnson & Johnson |
| Citigroup Inc. |
McDonald's Corp. |
| Coca-Cola Co. |
Merck & Co. |
| DuPont |
Microsoft |
| Eastman Kodak |
Minnesota Mining & Mfg. |
| Exxon Mobil Corp. |
Philip Morris Co. |
| General Electric |
Procter & Gamble |
| General Motors |
SBC Communications |
| Honeywell International Inc. |
United Technologies |
| Hewlett Packard Co. |
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. |
| Home Depot |
Walt Disney Co. |
Warren Buffet and Peter Lynch are two venerable, modern-day
value investors. Warren Buffet keeps his methodology close to the
chest, so you have to learn about it either by reading his famous
Chairman's letters in the Berkshire Hathaway annual
reports or through books written by others, such as Robert Hagstrom's
The Warren Buffet Way.
It's easier to get into Peter Lynch's head. Go to
Amazon.com and fill up your shopping cart with his offerings:
Beating
the Street, Learn
to Earn, and One
Up on Wall Street.
|