Showing posts with label THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 December 2025

THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET -Value Investing Made Easy

THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET

Value Investing Made Easy (Janet Lowe):
  1. THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET
  2. MR. MARKET
  3. SUITABLE SECURITIES AT SUITABLE PRICES
  4. PAYING RESPECT TO THE MARKET
  5. TIMING VERSUS PRICING
  6. BELIEVING A BULL MARKET
  7. THE PAUSE AT THE TOP OF THE ROLLER COASTER
  8. MAKING FRIENDS WITH A BEAR
  9. BARGAINS AT THE BOTTOM
  10. SIGNS AT THE BOTTOM
  11. BUYING TIME
  12. IF YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST PLAY THE HORSES



THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET

This passage explores the irrational nature of the market and how value investors navigate it.

  • Market Irrationality: Unlike normal consumer behavior, investors often buy stocks at high prices and avoid them at low prices. Markets are prone to overreact, swinging wildly above and below intrinsic value—a behavior likened to a hunting dog frenetically searching for a scent.

  • The 1987 Crash Example: The rapid 44% rise and subsequent 23% single-day crash in 1987 demonstrated that market prices can dramatically diverge from the underlying value of businesses.

  • Mr. Market's "Scatterbrained" Behavior: The case of Chrysler in 1995 shows how a stock can remain undervalued until an event (like a takeover bid) suddenly corrects the price, revealing the market's emotional and erratic pricing mechanism.

  • The Value Investor's Approach: Value investors acknowledge and use market cycles (the "wavelike advances and retreats") but do not try to predict their timing or extremes. Instead, they focus on buying undervalued stocks, knowing that market fluctuations will eventually correct the price toward intrinsic value, which is essential for their success.




MR. MARKET

This passage introduces the allegory of "Mr. Market," created by Benjamin Graham to illustrate the stock market's irrational and emotional behavior.

Mr. Market is depicted as a manic-depressive, compulsive business partner who offers to buy or sell you shares every day. His prices are driven by his volatile moods—euphoric optimism leads to unrealistically high offers, while pessimism leads to absurdly low ones. However, his mood swings are irrelevant to the underlying value of the business.

The key lesson is that Mr. Market exists to serve you, not guide you. A wise investor should ignore his emotional extremes and only act when his price is advantageous—buying when he is irrationally pessimistic and selling when he is overly optimistic. His offers are opportunities to be used, not signals to follow.




SUITABLE SECURITIES AT SUITABLE PRICES

This passage outlines the core value investing principle of focusing on price rather than prediction.

The investor's main goal is to acquire and hold suitable securities at suitable (low) prices. Market movements are practically useful only because they create these opportunities: low prices to buy and high prices to avoid buying or to sell.

However, while these market cycles are obvious in hindsight, they are impossible to predict in advance. The investor's success depends on both the market's future behavior and the prices it offers, yet neither can be controlled or forecasted. Therefore, the strategy relies on disciplined action when prices are favorable, not on trying to time the market's unpredictable turns.




PAYING RESPECT TO THE MARKET

Value investors and market timers share two key beliefs: the market frequently misprices assets away from their true value, and it eventually corrects to align with that value.

While value investors don't try to predict the exact timing of market highs and lows, they agree with timers that market movements are fundamentally linked to intrinsic value. They operate on the conviction that, due to changing conditions or investor recognition, a stock's price will ultimately rise or fall to reflect its actual worth, just as the moon influences the tides.




TIMING VERSUS PRICING

Value investors can exploit market swings through two methods: timing (predicting movements in advance) or pricing (acting based on established value).

Research shows that timing is ineffective and unreliable, as most attempts to predict the market fail to outperform a simple buy-and-hold strategy.

Therefore, Graham advocated the pricing approach. This means:

  • Buying only after a decline has occurred and securities are demonstrably undervalued.

  • Selling only after a bull market has pushed prices above intrinsic value.

By following this disciplined cycle—selling overvalued assets to hold cash, then using that cash to buy bargains during downturns—investors can exploit market swings after they happen, without needing to predict them.




BELIEVING A BULL MARKET

During a bull market, value investing becomes unpopular as speculative stocks surge, making value stocks seem boring in comparison. However, value stocks regain their appeal as stable, reliable holdings during a market correction.

Bull markets are typically characterized by:

  • High Prices: Price levels and P/E ratios are historically elevated.

  • Low Dividend Yields: Yields are low relative to bonds or the stock's own history.

  • Speculative Excess: There is heavy margin buying (borrowing to invest) and a flood of new stock offerings, particularly low-quality IPOs, which seasoned investors often view as overpriced during these periods.




THE PAUSE AT THE TOP OF THE ROLLER COASTER

When the market is at a high point, a value investor's only effective strategy is patience. They have two options, both requiring steady nerves:
  1. Sell everything, take profits, and wait for a market decline to find new bargains.

  2. Hold stocks with long-term potential, selling only the clearly overvalued ones, and again wait for a decline.

This patience pays off during a correction, as well-chosen value stocks tend to hold their price better. The example of Walter Schloss in 1987 shows that while value portfolios may lag in a bull market's peak, they often protect capital and outperform during downturns, preserving long-term returns.

In contrast, speculative "hot stocks" that crash put investors in a difficult position: selling locks in permanent losses, while holding on involves a long, erosionary recovery.




MAKING FRIENDS WITH A BEAR

This passage recounts Benjamin Graham's experience with the 1929 crash and its aftermath.

Even though he recognized the market was dangerously high and had carefully chosen and hedged his investments, Graham was still badly damaged by the crash due to incomplete hedges and excessive use of borrowed money (margin).

Despite these losses, he persevered, rebuilt his portfolio, and soon played a key role in triggering a market recovery by publicly declaring it was time to start buying again. His story illustrates both the severe risks of a crash and the resilience of a disciplined value investor.




BARGAINS AT THE BOTTOM

This article highlights how Benjamin Graham repeatedly identified and publicized extreme undervaluation in the stock market to spur recovery.
  • In 1932, during the Great Depression, Graham survived through various financial jobs and began buying defunct companies.

  • In 1942, he published a series in Forbes noting that many companies were trading for less than their cash holdings. His argument that businesses were "worth more dead than alive" gave discouraged investors confidence and helped start a sustained market recovery.

  • In 1974, during another market downturn, Graham gave a speech declaring a "Renaissance of Value," noting that stocks were again deeply discounted. He urged investment managers to buy these bargains. His call contributed to a market revival, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising from 600 to over 900 by 1976.

The core theme is Graham's repeated use of value investing principles—buying stocks far below their intrinsic value—to signal market bottoms and inspire investor action.





SIGNS AT THE BOTTOM

This passage explains that identifying a market bottom is theoretically simpler than spotting a top, based on clear quantitative evidence.

The key signs are found in corporate financial data (like balance sheets and P/E ratios) and in broad market metrics. As a primary example, it states that the dividend yield for the Dow Jones Industrial Average historically cycles between approximately 6% at a market bottom (signaling undervaluation) and 3% at a market top (signaling overvaluation). While it can sometimes move beyond these points, this yield range is presented as a reliable historical indicator.




BUYING TIME

This passage explains that a falling market is the ideal time for value investors to buy, but it requires overcoming fear and exercising patience.

  • Opportunity in Downturns: When markets fall sharply, value investors see a "harvest time" with many undervalued companies available. Figures like Seth Klarman and Warren Buffett view these periods as advantageous.

  • The Psychological Hurdle: This best buying time coincides with widespread investor fear and negativity, making it psychologically difficult to act.

  • The Strategy: The key is to buy affordable undervalued stocks during these bear market depths, as bargains are not found in strong markets.

  • The Need for Patience: Undervalued stocks often remain dormant for long periods. Therefore, successful investing requires identifying a bargain, taking a position, and then waiting—often a protracted and trying experience—for the market to recognize the value.




IF YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST PLAY THE HORSES

This passage outlines a strict, disciplined strategy for combining market timing with value investing, as acknowledged (but not recommended) by Benjamin Graham.

The method, attributed to Roger Babson, is structured and demands significant patience, as it may cause an investor to miss parts of a bull market. The strategy works as follows:

  1. Select: Choose a diversified portfolio of stocks, such as those in the DJIA, focusing on undervalued ones.

  2. Value: Determine a "normal value" for each stock using a multiplier applied to its 7-10 year average earnings.

  3. Buy: Purchase shares only when they trade at a substantial discount (e.g., two-thirds) to that normal value, potentially starting to buy as the price declines to 80% of value.

  4. Sell: Sell the stocks when their price rises substantially above normal value (e.g., 20-50% higher).

The core mechanism is to buy during market declines and sell during rallies, based strictly on predetermined price-to-value calculations rather than emotion.

Thursday, 8 January 2009

Thriving In Every Market

Thriving In Every Market
Value Investing Made Easy (Janet Lowe):
  1. THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET
  2. MR. MARKET
  3. SUITABLE SECURITIES AT SUITABLE PRICES
  4. PAYING RESPECT TO THE MARKET
  5. TIMING VERSUS PRICING
  6. BELIEVING A BULL MARKET
  7. THE PAUSE AT THE TOP OF THE ROLLER COASTER
  8. MAKING FRIENDS WITH A BEAR
  9. BARGAINS AT THE BOTTOM
  10. SIGNS AT THE BOTTOM
  11. BUYING TIME
  12. IF YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST PLAY THE HORSES

THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET

THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET

In almost every other walk of life, people buy more at lower prices; in the stock and bond market they seem to buy more at higher prices. (James Grant)

The October 1987 crash was a learning lab for all serious investors. As a result, investors came to understand that markets are never cured of their propensity to overheat and then to overcorrect. Markets may be continually in search of intrinsic value, but they do it the way a hunting dog searches for a scent. They rush madly back and forth across the clue, sniffing everywhere. The process can appear quite frenetic, even when the dog is on the track.

“Disregarding for the moment whether the prevailing level of stock prices on January 1, 1987, was logical, we are certain that the value of American industry in the aggregate had not increased by 44 percent as of August 25. Similarly, it is highly unlikely that the value of American industry declined by 23 percent on a single day, October 19,” wrote William Ruane and Richard Cunniff in the Sequoia Fund 1987 third-quarter report.

When a stock is undervalued, the stage is set for reversal. On that April 1995 day when Kirk Kerkorian and Lee Iacocca made a takeover move on Chrysler, did the actual value of the stock rocket from $39 per share to $55 per share overnight? Probably not. By most analytical standards, with a price-to-earnings ratio of 4, Chrysler was undervalued at $39. The takeover bid alerted investors to Chrysler’s situation, and at the beginning of September 1995, nearly 4 months afterward, the shares were still trading at around $55; even then the PE was only 8.

Such is the scatterbrained behavior of someone Benjamin Graham called “Mr. Market.”

To say that a value investor does not “play the market” is not to say that market cycles don’t exist and that they do not play an important role in the work of investing. One needs only to examine a chart of the movement of the DJIA over a long period of time – 10, 20 years or more – to see that there are wavelike advances and retreats in aggregate stock prices. Value investors realize that they cannot predict how low or how high a market indicator will move, or when a reversal will come. Market ebbs and flows are, admits Graham, an essential part of successful investing.



THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET
Value Investing Made Easy (Janet Lowe):
  1. THRIVING IN EVERY MARKET
  2. MR. MARKET
  3. SUITABLE SECURITIES AT SUITABLE PRICES
  4. PAYING RESPECT TO THE MARKET
  5. TIMING VERSUS PRICING
  6. BELIEVING A BULL MARKET
  7. THE PAUSE AT THE TOP OF THE ROLLER COASTER
  8. MAKING FRIENDS WITH A BEAR
  9. BARGAINS AT THE BOTTOM
  10. SIGNS AT THE BOTTOM
  11. BUYING TIME
  12. IF YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST PLAY THE HORSES