Showing posts with label Buffett Powerful Philosophy for Investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buffett Powerful Philosophy for Investing. Show all posts

Saturday 24 December 2011

Warren Buffett: How He Does It

Posted: Apr 22, 2005

Investopedia Staff

Did you know that a $10,000 investment in Berkshire Hathaway in 1965, the year Warren Buffett took control of it, would grow to be worth nearly $30 million by 2005? By comparison, $10,000 in the S&P 500 would have grown to only about $500,000. Whether you like him or not, Buffett's investment strategy is arguably the most successful ever. With a sustained compound return this high for this long, it's no wonder Buffett's legend has swelled to mythical proportions. But how the heck did he do it? In this article, we'll introduce you to some of the most important tenets of Buffett's investment philosophy. (For more on Warren Buffett and his current holdings, check out Coattail Investor.)

Buffett's Philosophy
Warren Buffett descends from the Benjamin Graham school of value investing. Value investors look for securities with prices that are unjustifiably low based on their intrinsic worth. When discussing stocks, determining intrinsic value can be a bit tricky as there is no universally accepted way to obtain this figure. Most often intrinsic worth is estimated by analyzing a company's fundamentals. Like bargain hunters, value investors seek products that are beneficial and of high quality but underpriced. In other words, the value investor searches for stocks that he or she believes are undervalued by the market. Like the bargain hunter, the value investor tries to find those items that are valuable but not recognized as such by the majority of other buyers.

Warren Buffett takes this value investing approach to another level. Many value investors aren't supporters of the efficient market hypothesis, but they do trust that the market will eventually start to favor those quality stocks that were, for a time, undervalued. Buffett, however, doesn't think in these terms. He isn't concerned with the supply and demand intricacies of the stock market. In fact, he's not really concerned with the activities of the stock market at all. This is the implication this paraphrase of his famous quote : "In the short term the market is a popularity contest; in the long term it is a weighing machine."(see What Is Warren Buffett's Investing Style?)

He chooses stocks solely on the basis of their overall potential as a company - he looks at each as a whole. Holding these stocks as a long-term play, Buffett seeks not capital gain but ownership in quality companies extremely capable of generating earnings. When Buffett invests in a company, he isn't concerned with whether the market will eventually recognize its worth; he is concerned with how well that company can make money as a business.

Buffett's Methodology
Here we look at how Buffett finds low-priced value by asking himself some questions when he evaluates the relationship between a stock's level of excellence and its price. Keep in mind that these are not the only things he analyzes but rather a brief summary of what Buffett looks for:

1. Has the company consistently performed well?
Sometimes return on equity (ROE) is referred to as "stockholder's return on investment". It reveals the rate at which shareholders are earning income on their shares. Buffett always looks at ROE to see whether or not a company has consistently performed well in comparison to other companies in the same industry. ROE is calculated as follows:

= Net Income / Shareholder's Equity

Looking at the ROE in just the last year isn't enough. The investor should view the ROE from the past five to 10 years to get a good idea of historical performance.

2. Has the company avoided excess debt?
The debt/equity ratio is another key characteristic Buffett considers carefully. Buffett prefers to see a small amount of debt so that earnings growth is being generated from shareholders' equity as opposed to borrowed money. The debt/equity ratio is calculated as follows:

= Total Liabilities / Shareholders' Equity

This ratio shows the proportion of equity and debt the company is using to finance its assets, and the higher the ratio, the more debt - rather than equity - is financing the company. A high level of debt compared to equity can result in volatile earnings and large interest expenses. For a more stringent test, investors sometimes use only long-term debt instead of total liabilities in the calculation above.

3. Are profit margins high? Are they increasing?
The profitability of a company depends not only on having a good profit margin but also on consistently increasing this profit margin. This margin is calculated by dividing net income by net sales. To get a good indication of historical profit margins, investors should look back at least five years. A high profit margin indicates the company is executing its business well, but increasing margins means management has been extremely efficient and successful at controlling expenses.


4. How long has the company been public?
Buffett typically considers only companies that have been around for at least 10 years. As a result, most of the technology companies that have had their initial public offerings (IPOs) in the past decade wouldn't get on Buffett's radar (not to mention the fact that Buffett will invest only in a business that he fully understands, and he admittedly does not understand what a lot of today's technology companies actually do). It makes sense that one of Buffet's criteria is longevity: value investing means looking at companies that have stood the test of time but are currently undervalued.

Never underestimate the value of historical performance, which demonstrates the company's ability (or inability) to increase shareholder value. Do keep in mind, however, that the past performance of a stock does not guarantee future performance - the job of the value investor is to determine how well the company can perform as well as it did in the past. Determining this is inherently tricky, but evidently Buffett is very good at it.


5. Do the company's products rely on a commodity?
Initially you might think of this question as a radical approach to narrowing down a company. Buffett, however, sees this question as an important one. He tends to shy away (but not always) from companies whose products are indistinguishable from those of competitors, and those that rely solely on a commodity such as oil and gas. If the company does not offer anything different than another firm within the same industry, Buffett sees little that sets the company apart. Any characteristic that is hard to replicate is what Buffett calls a company's economic moat, or competitive advantage. The wider the moat, the tougher it is for a competitor to gain market share.

6. Is the stock selling at a 25% discount to its real value?
This is the kicker. Finding companies that meet the other five criteria is one thing, but determining whether they are undervalued is the most difficult part of value investing, and Buffett's most important skill. To check this, an investor must determine the intrinsic value of a company by analyzing a number of business fundamentals, including earnings, revenues and assets. And a company's intrinsic value is usually higher (and more complicated) than its liquidation value - what a company would be worth if it were broken up and sold today. The liquidation value doesn't include intangibles such as the value of a brand name, which is not directly stated on the financial statements.

Once Buffett determines the intrinsic value of the company as a whole, he compares it to its current market capitalization - the current total worth (price). If his measurement of intrinsic value is at least 25% higher than the company's market capitalization, Buffett sees the company as one that has value. Sounds easy, doesn't it? Well, Buffett's success, however, depends on his unmatched skill in accurately determining this intrinsic value. While we can outline some of his criteria, we have no way of knowing exactly how he gained such precise mastery of calculating value. (To learn more about the value investing strategy of selecting stocks, check out our Guide To Stock-Picking Strategies.)

Conclusion
As you have probably noticed, Buffett's investing style, like the shopping style of a bargain hunter, reflects a practical, down-to-earth attitude. Buffett maintains this attitude in other areas of his life: he doesn't live in a huge house, he doesn't collect cars and he doesn't take a limousine to work. The value-investing style is not without its critics, but whether you support Buffett or not, the proof is in the pudding. As of 2004, he holds the title of the second-richest man in the world, with a net worth of more $40 billion (Forbes 2004). Do note that the most difficult thing for any value investor, including Buffett, is in accurately determining a company's intrinsic value.




by Investopedia Staff
Investopedia.com believes that individuals can excel at managing their financial affairs. As such, we strive to provide free educational content and tools to empower individual investors, including thousands of original and objective articles and tutorials on a wide variety of financial topics.


Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/articles/01/071801.asp#ixzz1hQOYoH3Y

Friday 16 December 2011

THE ESSAYS OF WARREN BUFFETT - Buffett Powerful Philosophy for Investing


Published:    March 28, 2001

THE ESSAYS OF WARREN BUFFETT


by, Joseph Dancy - LSGI Technology Venture Fund

Living quiet, unpretentious lives Mr. and Mrs. Othmer - a professor of chemical engineering and a former teacher - died a few years ago in their nineties. When the Othmer's died, friends were shocked to learn that their estate was worth $800 million.
The Othmer story is not unique. Anne Scheiber never married and worked for the government, never making more than $4,000 a year. She lived a quiet, simple life. When she died in 1995, her estate was worth $22 million. Likewise, Jacob Leeder lived in a modest home and drove a 1984 Oldsmobile station wagon. Occasionally he would go out to eat - usually at a cheap, cafeteria- style restaurant. It wasn't until Leeder died last year that friends discovered that he was worth $36 million.
How did these people get so rich? Like many long term investors, they put their money into well managed undervalued companies and left it there. The Othmers had an additional benefit: in the early 1960s they each invested $25,000 with Warren Buffett. Today Mrs. Othmer's shares are worth $578 million; her husband's, sold on his death when the price was lower, were worth $210 million. Even without Mr. Buffett, if they had put their funds into the broader market they still would have done well - having an estate with a current value of between $50 million and $100 million.

The Essays of Warren Buffett

The investment strategies utilized by Warren Buffett to attain the Othmer's gains were recently published by a law professor at Cardozo University. Entitled "The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America" it is a compilation of Buffett's annual reports and other communications, and is a good overview for those not familiar with his investment philosophy (available by sending $17.45 to Prof. Lawrence Cunningham, Cardozo University, 55 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10003). Some of Buffett's more interesting investment philosophies are as follows:

1. Buy a Good "Business Boat"

Buffett points out the importance of choosing a company situated in a growing and profitable industry. He identifies his largest investment mistake - buying the company his firm was named after (Berkshire Hathaway) - not because the company was flawed, but because the industry it was in (textiles) was so unattractive.
Buffett recalls how the textile industry provided very meager returns for Berkshire. No matter how well managed the company was it would always have subnormal returns. The textile industry was a commodity business, competitors had facilities located overseas that were low cost producers, and substantial excess capacity existed worldwide.
Buffett claims he would not close down a business that is important to a community just to improve the corporate rate of return, but if it appeared that losses would be unending no other course of action makes rational economic sense.
Buffett notes "a good managerial record (measured by economic returns) is far more a function of what business boat you get into than it is of how effectively you row . . . Should you find yourself in a chronically-leaking boat, energy devoted to changing vessels is likely to be more productive than energy devoted to patching leaks."

2. Compound Returns by Deferring Taxes

One reason that the Othmer's were able to accumulate $800 million in assets was because their investment in Berkshire stock compounded and their capital gains taxes were never realized. "Tax-paying investors will realize a far, far greater sum from a single investment that compounds internally at a given rate than from a succession of investments compounding at the same rate. But I suspect many Berkshire shareholders figured that out long ago" according to Buffett.
Illustrating the point he notes "imagine that Berkshire had only $1, which we put in a security that doubled by year end and was then sold. Imagine further that we used the after-tax proceeds to repeat this process in each of the next 19 years, scoring a double each time. At the end of the 20 years . . . we would be left with $25,250. Not bad. If, however, we made a single fantastic investment that itself doubled 20 times in 20 years . . . we would be left with about $692,000."
Buffett's calculations use a capital gains tax rate of 34% - much higher than today's, but the point is well taken. Deferred taxes allow an investment to compound, increasing the return on investment.

3. Concentration of Investments

Professor Cunningham notes that "contrary to modern finance theory, Buffett's investment knitting does not prescribe diversification. It may even call for concentration . . . a strategy of financial and mental concentration may reduce risk by raising both the intensity of an investor's thinking about a business and the comfort level he must have with its fundamental characteristics before buying it."
Other articles have noted the tendency of Buffett to concentrate his investments, and claim that this is part of his success. If nothing else, concentration allows an investor to follow a company much more closely - which allows them to better judge when a stock is undervalued.

4. Good Business Judgment & Mr. Market

Buffett subscribes to the theory that the market is not always efficient, and that at certain times companies will be grossly undervalued or overvalued. The market allows an astute investor to buy positions in companies well below intrinsic values. In the long term, such value will be recognized.
"An investor will succeed by coupling good business judgment with an ability to insulate his thoughts and behavior from the super-contagious emotions that swirl about the marketplace . . . The speed at which a business's success is recognized is not that important as long as the company's intrinsic value is increasing at a satisfactory rate - in fact, delayed recognition can be an advantage: It may give us the chance to buy more of a good thing at a bargain price."

5. Small Base From Which to Grow

Due to the size of the funds Berkshire now manages, Buffett recognizes that the return he will obtain from his investments will be lower than when he was managing much smaller sums. Using analogies to the growth of bacteria, he notes that growth from a small base can continue at a much faster pace for much longer than from a large base.
The larger sums now being managed limit the size of companies Berkshire can invest in - using a concentrated investment approach meaningful investments in small and micro-cap companies cannot be made from a practical standpoint.

Summary

Those who are familiar with Buffett's investing style, or who have read some of the books on him published recently or the Berkshire annual reports, will find little new here. Even so, it is always interesting to read the thoughts and investment strategies of one of the world's most successful investors.


http://www.marketocracy.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Portfolio.woa/wa/ArticleViewPage?source=IdKnEfOoDlLlKcDcMaKiAbLb

Sunday 11 December 2011

The benefits of having an investment philosophy and strategy

The benefits of having a strategy to support your investing are:
- the removal of subjectivity
- consistency in your investment decisions
- the ability to repeat your successes and avoid repeating your mistakes.

A strategy is simply a set of rules or guidelines that are adopted consistently over time.  Having a strategy does not prevent you from having losses though.  By documenting your approach to investing you can help remove the emotive element to making a decision by ensuring that you have developed a solid argument to support your investment decision.  Another advantage of having documented your approach to decision making means that your have a record of how you achieved your successful results to help you repeat them.

Wednesday 26 October 2011

Are you Mr. Market or Mr. Buffett? Rewire yourself to Invest like Mr. Buffett.


Warren Buffett's Investment Advice: Why It's So Hard to Follow

by Carlos Portocarrero on 18 March 2010


A year ago, I wrote a piece called Cash is King: Now What Should I do With It? 
After going through all the responsible options of what I could do with our pile of cash, I added one last one: what if I just threw it in the stock market and tried to double it?
Obviously, the fear of getting stabbed and divorced by my wife told me that this wasn't worth it—the risk was too high.
But you always wonder...what if...?
Chart of the S&P 500
You'll see that the market had just bottomed out and was on a path to a steady recovery. Maybe it wasn't such a crazy idea to invest that pile of cash after all.

What Would've Happened

The day I published the story, the S&P 500 was at around 814. If I would've invested $10,000 in the S&P, I would've bought just over 12 "shares." Today, those "shares" would be worth $14,238. That's a 42% return in just under a year—an outstanding return.

What this Has to do With Warren Buffett

I've said this before many times: I'm a huge fan of Warren Buffett. I think his mix of intelligence, patience, and quirkiness is admirable. And one of his most famous sayings applies to my whole dilemma of investing (or not investing) my pile of money a year ago:
Be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy
Back in March 2009, everyone was scared. From mutual fund managers to your average mom and pop store—we were all scared. No one knew what was going to happen to the economy and the stock market had just annihilated millions of dollars of people's money. It was the perfect time to put Warren Buffett's axiom to the test.
But that's where the problem lies: I was one of the people that was scared. There was no way I was putting all my hard-earned money into a machine that so many were saying was broken and had already cost so many people their life's savings.
And this is why Warren Buffett commands so much respect: he not only talks the talk, he walks the walk. He reacts differently than the rest of us to these situations: he trusts his instincts and doesn't get caught up in the panic that most of us do. And believe me, back then there was quite a bit of panic.
This is why we can't simply "invest like Warren Buffett." You have to have the cash, the brains, and the ability to overcome panic and fear. Forget about picking the right stocks—that's the least of it—the hardest part is not falling for all the hysteria and panic in the air.
The opposite is also true: the next time you see people acting greedy and feeling a little too comfortable with themselves and how much money they're making in the stock market—watch out. Something bad is about to happen.


http://www.wisebread.com/warren-buffetts-investment-advice-why-its-so-hard-to-follow

Saturday 19 June 2010

Be a stock picker: Buy GREAT companies and hold for the long term until their fundamentals change

Chart forPETRONAS DAGANGAN BHD (5681.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for Petronas Dagangan Berhad

Chart forPUBLIC BANK BHD (1295.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for Public Bank Berhad

Chart forLPI CAPITAL BHD (8621.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for LPI Capital Berhad

Chart forDUTCH LADY MILK INDUSTRIES BHD (3026.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for Dutch Lady Milk Industries Berhad


Chart forNESTLE (M) BHD (4707.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for Nestle (Malaysia) Berhad

Chart forGUINNESS ANCHOR BHD (3255.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for Guinness Anchor Berhad

Chart forPPB GROUP BHD (4065.KL)

Stock Performance Chart for PPB Group Berhad


All the above are GREAT companies.

NEVER buy these GREAT companies at HIGH prices.

You can often buy them at FAIR prices.

On certain occasions, you have the chance to buy them at slightly BARGAIN prices.

Rarely, for example during the recent 2008 Crash, you had the chance to buy them at GREAT prices.

It is better to buy a GREAT company at a FAIR price than to buy a FAIR company at a GREAT price.

It is safe to hold these stocks for the long term since these companies have competitive advantages, selling only when their fundamentals change.

The present prices of these stocks are near or above their previous high prices.

Those who bought regularly into these stocks would have capital gains, through dollar-cost averaging.


Further comments:

  1. Warren, on the other hand, after starting his career with Graham, discovered the tremendous wealth-creating economics of a company that possessed a long-term competitive advantage over its competitors.  
  2. Warren realized that the longer you held one of these fantastic businesses, the richer it made you.  
  3. While Graham would have argued that these super businesses  were all overpriced, Warren realized that he didn't have to wait for the stock market to serve up a bargain price, that even if he paid a fair price, he could still get superrich off of those businesses.  
  4. In the process of discovering the advantages of owning a business with a long-term competitive advantage, Warren developed a unique set of analytical tools to help identify these special kinds of businesses.  
  5. Though rooted in the old school Grahamian language, his new way of looking at things enabled him to determine whether the company could survive its current problems.  
  6. Warren's way also told him whether or not the company in question possessed a long-term competitive advantage that would make him superrich over the long run.  
  7. By learning or copying Warren, you can make the quantum leap that Warren made by enabling you to go beyond the old school Grahamian valuation models and discover, as Warren did, the phenomenal long-term wealth-creating power of a company that possesses a durable competitive advantage over its competitors.
  8. In the process you'll free yourself from the costly manipulations of Wall Street and gain the opportunity to join the growing ranks of intelligent investors the world over who are becoming tremendously wealthy following in the footsteps of this legendary and masterful investor.


Related:

The Evolution of Warren Buffett

Learning and Understanding the Evolution of Warren Buffett
Li Lu sharing his Value Investing Strategies (Video)
The Three Gs of Buffett: Great, Good and Gruesome


The GREAT company has long-term competitive advantage in a stable industry.  This company:



  • takes a one time investment capital and 
  • pays you a very attractive return (dividend + capital appreciation), 
  • which will continue to increase as years pass by;

Here are the golden words of Buffett on the GREAT businesses to own:

1.  On 'Great' businesses, Buffett says, "Long-term competitive advantage in a stable industry is what we seek in a business.


  • If that comes with rapid organic growth, great. 
  • But even without organic growth, such a business is rewarding. 
  • We will simply take the lush earnings of the business and use them to buy similar businesses elsewhere. 
  • There's no rule that you have to invest money where you've earned it. 
  • Indeed, it's often a mistake to do so: Truly great businesses, earning huge returns on tangible assets, can't for any extended period reinvest a large portion of their earnings internally at high rates of return."

Tuesday 13 April 2010

Buffett Investing = Value + Growth

Buffett-style Investing

Value Investing and Growth Investing are joined at the hip

The main message from value investing strategies is to invest with low downside risk.  

If a stock satisfies this criterion, you should then consider its growth in earnings to implement a value-plus-growth strategy (Buffett-style investing).

The focus in value investing is on the past, the focus in growth investing is on the future, and the focus in Buffett-style investing is on both the past and the future.

You should also pay special attention to management quality, because high-quality management is the source of growth in Buffett-style investing.

To implement the above strategy, you should compute the stock's intrinsic value and compare it with the stock's price.

As a general rule of thumb, if the price is about half the intrinsic value, it is worth investing in that stock.



The Renaissance Investor

There is more to Buffett than simply value and growth investing.

Buffett engages in

  • arbitrage investing, 
  • investing in silver futures, 
  • betting on oil, 
  • forward trading in foreign currencies, 
  • managing a large number of wholly owned subsidiaries, and 
  • writing derivative contracts.


He frequently narrates investment-relevant stories from other fields such as

  • psychology, 
  • sports, 
  • country music, and
  • life in general.


Given his broad knowledge and his deep understanding of investment-related topics, it is preferable to call him a renaissance investor rather than attempting to pin him down under more limiting monikers.

Thursday 10 December 2009

****Buffett Fundamental Investing: How to pick stocks like Warren Buffett

Buffett Fundamental Investing

How to Pick Stock Like Warren Buffett by Timothy Vick

1.  Intrinsic Value = sum total of future expected Earnings with each year's Earnings discounted by the Time Value of Money.

2.  A company's Growth record is the most reliable predictor of its future course.  It is best to average past Earnings to get a realistic figure.  Each year's Earnings need to be discounted by the appropriate discount rate.

3.  Is the stock more attractive than a bond?  Divide the 12 months EPS by the current rate of long-term Government Bonds e.g. EPS of $2.50 / 6% or 0.06 = $40.  If the stock trades for less than $40, it is better value than a bond.  If the share's earnings are expected to grow annually, it will beat a bond.

4.  Identify the expected Price Range, Projected future EPS 10 years out, based on average of past EPS Growth.  Multiply by the High and Low PE Ratios to find the expected Price Range.  Add in the expected Dividends for the period.  Compute an annualised Rate of Return based on the increase in the Share Price.  Buffett's hurdle is 15%.

5.  Book Value.  Ultimately, Price shoud approximate growth in Book Value and in Intrinsic Value.  Watch out the increases in Book Value which are generated artificially
  • a) issuing more shares
  • b) acquisitions
  • c) leaving cash in the bank to earn interest, in which case ROE will slowly fall. 
Buffett is against the use of accounting charges and write-offs to artificially improve the look of future profits.

6.  Return on Equity.  ROE = Net Income (end-of-year Shareholders' Equity + start-of-year Shareholder's Equity/2).  Good returns on ROE should benefit the Share Price.  High ROE - EPS Growth - Increase in Shareholder's Equity - Intrinsic Value - Share Price.  A high ROE is difficult to maintain, as the company gets bigger.  Look for high ROE with little or no debt.  Drug and Consumer product companies can carry over 50% Debt and still have high ROEs.  Share buy-backs can be used to manipulate higher ROEs.  ROE should be 15%+.

7.  Rate of Returns.  15% Rule.  Collect and calculate figures on the following:
  • current EPS
  • estimate future Growth Rate of use Consensus Forecasts
  • calculate historic average PE Ratio
  • calculate Dividend Payout Ratio
-----
Tabulation in Table Format

Price:
EPS:
PE:
Growth Rate:
Average PE:
Dividend Payout:

Year ---- EPS
20-
20-
20-
20-
20-
20-
20-
20-
20-
20-
----------------
Total

Price needed in 10 years to get 15%:  $____

Expected 10-year Price (20--EPS* Av. PE):  $____
Plus expected Dividends:  $____

Total Return:  $____

Expected 10-year Rate of Return:   ____%

-----
Highest Price you can pay to get 15% return: $ _____

------



Stock Evaluation.  Can a company earn its present Market Cap.  in terms of future Profits?  Does the company have a consistent record of accomplishment?

Shares are Bonds with less predictable Coupons.  Shares must beat inflation, Government Bond Yields and be able to rise over time.  Shares should be bought in preference to Bonds when the current Earnings Yield (Current Earnings/Price) is at or above the level of long-term Bonds.

When To Sell:

  • Bond Yields are rising and about to overtake Share Earnings Yields.
  • Share Prices are rising at a greater rate than the economy is expanding.
  • Excessive PE multiples, even allowing for productivity and low interest rates.
  • Economy cannot get any stronger.

Takeover Arbitrage

  • Buy at a Price below the target takeover Price.
  • Only invest in deals already announced.
  • Calculate Profits in Advance.  Annualised return of 20-30% needed.
  • Ensure the deal is almost certain.  A widening spread may mean the worst.

General Criteria:

  • Consistent Earnings Growth
  • High Cash Flow and Low level of Spending
  • Little need of long-term Debt
  • High ROE 15%+
  • High ROA (Return on Total Inventory plus Plant)
  • Low Price relative to Valuation.

Buffett-Style Value Criteria and Filter.

1.  Earnings yield should be at least twice the AAA bond yield (which is about 5.9%)
2.  PE should be less than 40% of the share's highest PER over the previous five years.
3.  Dividend yield should be at least two thirds of the AAA bond yield.
4.  Stock price should be no more than two thirds of company's tangible book value per share.
5.  Company should be selling in the market for no more than two thirds of its net current assets.

To this, add Margin of Safety criteria:

1.  Company should owe no more than it is worth:  total debt should not exceed book value.
2.  Current assets should be at least twice current liabilities - in other words, the current ratio should exceed 2.
3.  Total debt should be less than twice net current assets.
4.  Earnings growth should be at least 7% a year compound over the past decade.
5.  As an indication of stability of earnings, there should have been no more than two annual earnings declines of 5% or more during the past decade.


Demanding a share price no more than two-thirds tangible assets is asking too much of today's market.  The basic search, therefore, used the following sieves:

1.  PE less than 8.5.  This is the implied multiple from the demand that the earnings yield should be more than twice 5.9%.  The inverse of an 11.8% earnings yield is a price-earnings multiple of 8.5.
2.  A dividend yield of at least 4% - two thirds of the 5.9% AAA bond yield.
3.  A Price to Tangible Assets Ratio of less than 0.8 - price less than four-fifths tangible assets.
4.  Gross Gearing of less than 100% -  the company does not owe more than it is worth.
5.  Current Ratio of at least two - in other words current assets are at least twice current liabilities.


http://www.docstoc.com/docs/7984050/Investment-Strategies (Page 91)

Wednesday 21 October 2009

To win, the first thing you have to do is not lose.

Warren Buffett worked from the first principle he had learned from Graham:

To win, the first thing you have to do is not lose.

If one were to buy shares at depressed level, one is fairly confident that one will not lose, even if the loss is only on paper.  Buffett's principle rule for trading is this:

Never count on making a good sale, have the purchase price be so attractive that even a mediocre sale gives good results.

Tuesday 5 May 2009

Using Buffett's Simple Yet Powerful Philosophy

Invest Like Warren Buffett: A Simple Yet Powerful Philosophy for Investing

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud, Chairman, Investment U
September 26, 2002: Issue #174

Legendary investor Warren Buffett said yesterday in London that things aren’t that bad right now, and that the stock market is “way out of sync with the economy.”

When the greatest investor on the planet is optimistic, that’s as bullish a sign as you’ll find anywhere.

Warren Buffett became the second wealthiest man in the world (with $36 billion) by investing with one simple principle: He only invests in businesses he understands, and at prices so cheap that there’s plenty of margin for safety if things go wrong.

You, Too, Can Invest Like Buffett… Using His Simple Yet Powerful Philosophy

We’ve touched on these points before… but Warren Buffett has built a fortune based on a few simple ideas that anyone can follow. Let’s break Buffett’s basic investment philosophy down into two parts. You can use it to test your own investment decisions:

1. According to Buffett, you need to invest only in a business you understand… and NOT in companies you hear about at cocktail parties. Bottom line - if you don’t know what the company does then you shouldn’t invest. It’s your money. Take the time to do the homework and research on any company you’re considering investing in. Plenty of free tools are out there on the Internet to help you to this end.

2. Buffett also believes in buying cheap. Admittedly, the idea of “buy low, sell high” is easier said than done. But the point is a valid one: by buying “cheap” on what you invest in, you greatly reduce the chances of losing money. Think about it: you shop around for the best prices on nearly everything you buy. Likewise, why wouldn’t you do the same with your investments?

Warren Buffett’s Take on the Recent Market Declines: “Nothing Frightening”

When asked about the recent stock market declines, Buffett said: “I find nothing frightening about it at all. If I own a good business, I don’t really care whether the markets open tomorrow.”

“I have no idea what business is going to do next month or next year,” Buffett continued. “I don’t think it’s important whether you’re confident about tomorrow or next week.” Warren added that his confidence comes from taking a long-term view of the investment market and the economy.

“If the economy does well over a long period, markets will do well over a long period,” he said. “In the short run, the market’s a voting machine and sometimes people vote very unintelligently. In the long run, it’s a weighing machine and the weight of business and how it does is what affects values over time.”

Buffett in Conclusion

Much has been written about Warren Buffett in the last 20 years. Yet these few paragraphs sum up his simple investing philosophy. If he’d been asked these same basic questions 20 years ago, at the beginning of the great bull market, his answers would have probably been exactly the same. If you’re looking for comfort today, take it in the fact that the greatest investor of our time likes the market forecast and remains bullish.

One of the real keys to successful investing is having your own investment philosophy and sticking with it. If you don’t have one yet, you may want to borrow Warren Buffett’s. From zero to $36 billion in worth, I’d say it’s done okay for him

Good investing,
Steve
Today’s IU Crib Sheet

A final point about what Warren Buffett had to say: Taking a long-term view of the market and the economy is very important. In today’s world of real-time stock quotes, daily market analysis and the likeit’s very easy to become clouded by the news of the day (or the week.) But remember: if you’re investing for the long run you need to take a long-term view of the stock market. Try to avoid making hasty decisions based on the events of a few days or a few weeks.

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Read more on Warren Buffett, How To Invest at Wikinvest

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