Saturday, 1 January 2011

Are Cyclical stocks also Value stocks? Value stocks usually earn money, turnaround stocks may not.

What are the characteristics of value stocks?

  1. True value investors only buy if a stock is trading substantially below its tangible book value.  It’s hard finding these types of situations in all your investments.  Use this as a guide and not as a “must have.” Over the years, you will have noticed these types of values in the banking, energy and chemical industries, among others.
  2. Another factor you need to find in a value stock is a low price to earnings (“P/E”) ratio.  You are looking for a beaten down stock in an out-of-favor industry. A nice P/E discount is 20% to 50% of the industry average over a few years. You then have the potential to make a nice return on both the natural rotation of the industry to a higher timeliness, as well as the stock regaining market favor. 

When is a cyclical stock also a value stock?


Many investors view cyclical stocks as value stocks. Cyclical stocks are value stocks only if they sell at an earnings (P/E) discount to their peers and meet the book value criteria as mentioned above. 




When is a cyclical stock not value stocks but a turnaround stock?


If the company is selling at a discount to its tangible bookvalue, but its earnings have disappeared, it becomes a possible turnaround situation and not a value stock.


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