Title: Value Stock Investing
1- Value Stock Investing
- (chapter 11)
2Value Investing
- Finding securities considered to be temporarily
undervalued or unpopular for various reasons. - Determine Economic Value of the firm
- Sometimes called Fundamental Value
- Compare to current price
- Value investing is a contrarian philosophy
- Not following the herd
3Characteristics of Value Firms
- Measures
- Price to Book Firms with low P/B (or high B/M)
are value stocks - Price to Earnings ratio Firms with low P/E are
considered value stocks. - Earnings could be negative or vary because of
extraordinary items.
4Finding Fundamental Value
- Present Value Model
- The value today, of receiving a dividend and next
years price, is - k is the risk-adjusted discount rate.
- But what is next years price?
- So,
5- Continuing the substitution, leads to the general
present value equation - How is Pn estimated?
- One method is to use the P/E ratio. Note that
6- EXAMPLE According to information obtained from
Yahoo! Finance, Freddie Mac (FRE) has a current
price of 64 per share, an expected dividend per
share of 1.40, an EPS of 7.50, expected EPS
growth of 6 per year, and a typical P/E ratio of
12. - According to the Present Value Model, what is the
present value of FRE using a discount rate of 14
and a five years analysis period? Is it
undervalued or overvalued? - Solution
- Estimated price in five years
- Future dividends are
- Present Value is
7- Note that the model depends on growth rates of
the profits and dividends. - Constant Growth Model
- Also called the Gordon Growth Model
- If you can assume that the future growth of the
company is constant, then the equation becomes - Only works for k gt g
8- A company paid a 0.75 per share dividend this
year and it is expected to grow at 5. If the
required rate of return for this firm is 10,
what is its fundamental value? - If the stock is a preferred stock (pays a
constant dividend), then g0. - Notice how much more valuable a growing firm is!
9What is the appropriate discount rate?
- Various methods
- CAPM
- Requires company beta, market return, risk free
rate - From the constant growth model
10Graham Dodd Approach
- Coauthors of Security Analysisvalue investors
bible - Graham lost fortune in 1929 crash.
- Learned that true measure of stock values come
from earnings, dividends, future prospects, and
asset values, NOT price movements - Graham teamed up with professor Dodd to write the
book, 1934
11- Most important idea margin of safetypositive
difference between price and value - Degree of bargain-ness
- Enlightened stock analysisprice vs. true
intrinsic or real economic value - Liked firms that sell below liquidation value
12Warren Buffett Current leader of the value
investing strategy
- 10 lessons from Warren Buffett
- Better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price
then a fair company at a wonderful price. - When a management with a reputation for
brilliance tackles a business with a reputation
for bad economics, it is the reputation of the
business that survives. - Management does better by avoiding dragons, not
slaying them. - Like Newtons law of motion, an institution will
resist any change in its current direction. - Corporate projects will materialize to soak up
available funds.
136. Cravings of the leader, however foolish, will
be quickly supported by detailed studies prepared
by the troops. 7. The behavior of peer companies
will be mindlessly imitated. 8. It is not a sin
to miss a business opportunity outside ones area
of expertise. 9. If your actions are sensible,
you are certain to get good results. 10. Do not
join with managers who lack admirable qualities,
no matter how attractive the prospects of their
business.
14Dividends An Important Part of Total Return from
Value Firms
- Dividends mitigate risksbird in hand theory
- Dividend growth
- Dividends give more stable income streams than
bonds. - Dividends grow faster than inflation over time.
- Dividend yields have decreased over the last two
decades. - Valuable indicator of corporate health
15Quality at a Reasonable Price
- value of ROE, or VRE
- VRE return on equity divided by the P/E ratio
- If VRE 1, the stock may be worthy of investment
attention and possible purchase. - If VRE 2, the stock is definitely worthy of
investment attention and may represent a very
attractive investment. - If VRE 3, the stock is apt to represent an
extraordinarily attractive investment
opportunity.
16Use the value of ROE to determine the worthiness
of the stock to a value investor for the
following stocks Company ROE P/E Intel 19.6
20.0 Ford Motor 24.1 6.3 Procter
Gamble 40.2 20.9 Solution Compute the value
of ROE Company VRE Intel 19.6 / 20.0
0.98 Ford Motor 24.1 / 6.3 3.83 Procter
Gamble 40.2 / 20.9 1.92 With a VRE 0.98,
Intel is not a candidate for a quality-at-a-reason
able-price stock. Procter Gamble may be worthy
of further investigation. Since Ford Motors VRE
is greater than 3, it represents a very
attractive possibility for a value investor.
17Finding Value Stocks
- Common Criteria for Value Stocks
- Ample cash reserves (cash gt 10 of market cap).
- Ample free cash flow to fund necessary investment
(EBIDTA gt capital spending). - Conservative dividend payout policy (dividend lt
75 of EPS). - Conservative financial structure (debt lt 50 of
market cap). - Conservative issuance of common stock to managers
and other employees (constant or falling number
of shares outstanding). - Low price-book ratio relative to the market and a
company's own history (P/B lt 75 of SP 500
average). - Low price-cash flow ratio relative to the market
and a company's own history (P/CF lt 75 of SP
500 average). - Low price-earnings ratio relative to the market
and a company's own history (P/E lt 75 of SP 500
average). - Negative investor sentiment as reflected in poor
financial ratings (SP rating of B- or worse). - Significant dividend income (yield gt 150 of SP
500 average).
18Stock Screener at Yahoo! Finance
19Value InvestingAdvantages Limitations
- Careful stock selection should limit downside risk
- Difficulty obtaining reliable and relevant
information - Not necessarily a buy-and-hold strategyconstant
recycling of stocks through portfolio constant
research and vigilance - Popular rules-of-thumb already factored into
market?
20Learning objectives
Discuss the characteristics of value
investing Know how to apply the value model using
discounted dividends Know the constant growth
model Know the use of P/E ration calculate the
intrinsic value (slide 6) Know the two formulas
to calculate the cost of equity/ discount
rate Discuss the main investment ideas behind the
Graham and Dodd approach to value
investing Discuss five investment ideas behind
Warren Buffett approach to value
investing Discuss the concept of Quality at a
reasonable price Discuss the Contrarian
investment philosophy Discuss the role of
dividends and value investing (text pages 340 to
343) End of chapter questions 11.1,11.2, 11.4,
11.5, 11.6 Problem 11.2 CFA problem 11.2