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VintageValueinvesting

Ben Graham, the father of value investing, wasn’t born in this century. Nor was he born in the last century. Benjamin Graham – born Benjamin Grossbaum – was born in London, England in 1894. He published the value investing bible Security Analysis in 1934, which was followed by the value investing New Testament The Intelligent Investor in 1949. Warren Buffett, the value investing messiah and Graham’s most famous and successful disciple, was born in 1930 and attended Graham’s classes at Columbia in 1950-51. And the not-so-prodigal son Charlie Munger even has Warren beat by six years – he was born in 1924. I’m not trying to give a history lesson here, but I find these dates very interesting. Value investing is an old strategy. It’s been around for a long time, long before the Capital Asset Pricing Model, long before the Black-Scholes Model, long before CLO’s, long before the founders of today’s hottest high-tech IPOs were even born. And yet people have very short term memories. Once a bull market gets some legs in it, the quest to get “the most money as quickly as possible” causes prices to get bid up. Human nature kicks in and dollar signs start appearing in people’s eyes. New methodologies are touted and fundamental principles are left in the rear view mirror. “Today is always the dawning of a new age. Things are different than they were yesterday. The world is changing and we must adapt.” Yes, all very true statements but the new and “fool-proof” methods and strategies and overleveraging and excess risk-taking only work when the economic environmental conditions allow them to work. Using the latest “fool-proof” investment strategy is like running around a thunderstorm with a lightning rod in your hand: if you’re unharmed after a while then it might seem like you’ve developed a method to avoid getting struck by lightning – but sooner or later you will get hit. And yet value investors are for the most part immune to the thunder and lightning. This isn’t at all to say that value investors never lose money, go bust, or suffer during recessions. However, by sticking to fundamentals and avoiding excessive risk-taking (i.e. dumb decisions), the collective value investor class seems to have much fewer examples of the spectacular crash-and-burn cases that often are found with investors’ who employ different strategies. As a result, value investors have historically outperformed other types of investors over the long term. And there is plenty of empirical evidence to back this up. Check this and this and this and this out. In fact, since 1926 value stocks have outperformed growth stocks by an average of four percentage points annually, according to the authoritative index compiled by finance professors Eugene Fama of the University of Chicago and Kenneth French of Dartmouth College. So, the value investing philosophy has endured for over 80 years and is the most consistently successful strategy that can be applied. And while hot stocks, over-leveraged portfolios, and the newest complicated financial strategies will come and go, making many wishful investors rich very quick and poor even quicker, value investing will quietly continue to help its adherents fatten their wallets. It will always endure and will always remain classically in fashion. In other words, value investing is vintage. Which explains half of this website’s name. As for the value part? The intention of this site is to explain, discuss, ask, learn, teach, and debate those topics and questions that I’ve always been most interested in, and hopefully that you’re most curious about, too. This includes: What is value investing? Value investing strategies Stock picks Company reviews Basic financial concepts Investor profiles Investment ideas Current events Economics Behavioral finance And, ultimately, ways to become a better investor I want to note the importance of the way I use value here. It’s not the simplistic definition of “low P/E” stocks that some financial services lazily use to classify investors, which the word “value” has recently morphed into meaning. To me, value investing equates to the term “Intelligent Investing,” as described by Ben Graham. Intelligent investing involves analyzing a company’s fundamentals and can be characterized by an intense focus on a stock’s price, it’s intrinsic value, and the very important ratio between the two. This is value investing as the term was originally meant to be used decades ago, and is the only way it should be used today. So without much further ado, it’s my very good honor to meet you and you may call me…
Clearbridge Value Trust

WEEKEND READING LIST (JAN 23-24, 2016)

What I’m reading this weekend: BOOK(S) LAWRENCE IN ARABIA: WAR, DECEIT, IMPERIAL FOLLY AND THE MAKING OF THE MODERN MIDDLE … Read more

The Stock Market - Economy Disconnect

The Stock Market – Economy Disconnect: Just Stay The Course…

The Stock Market – Economy Disconnect: Just Stay The Course… by John, Vintage Value The stock market is finally getting … Read more

value bar log final

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY & WARREN BUFFETT’S MILLIONAIRES CLUB

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY & WARREN BUFFETT’S MILLIONAIRES CLUB by Vintage Value Investing In 1964, when Warren Buffett first took over Berkshire … Read more

Weekend Reading List (Jan 16-17, 2016)

Weekend Reading List (Jan 16-17, 2016) by Vintage Value Investing  What I’m reading this weekend: J.P. Morgan’s Guide to the Markets 1Q16 – J.P. … Read more

MLK Jr Day – The Old Boys’ Club: The Investing World’s Diversity Problem

 MLK Jr Day – The Old Boys’ Club: The Investing World’s Diversity Problem by Vintage Value Investing Today we celebrate … Read more

warren buffett net worth over time

Warren Buffett’s Net Worth Over The Years

WARREN BUFFETT’S NET WORTH OVER THE YEARS by Vintage Value Investing Q1 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and more Warren … Read more

Discount rates through 2011

How To Determine A Discount Rate

How To Determine A Discount Rate As I mentioned in Value Investing 101: The Time Value of Money, interest rates are … Read more

reminiscences of a stock operator pdf

Nine Cognitive Biases You Need To Understand To Master Your Money

Nine Cognitive Biases You Need To Understand To Master Your Money The world is incredibly complicated. We are constantly being presented … Read more

Value Stocks vs. Glamour Stocks

WHAT’S BETTER: VALUE INVESTING OR GROWTH INVESTING?

WHAT’S BETTER: VALUE INVESTING OR GROWTH INVESTING? Imagine this scene: A boxer sits in one corner of the ring, his shoulders … Read more

tabe1 large

WHY AN INTELLIGENT INVESTOR KNOWS THAT GOOD INVESTING HURTS

WHY AN INTELLIGENT INVESTOR KNOWS THAT GOOD INVESTING HURTS “You need to be comfortable being uncomfortable.” – Mark Owen, Navy … Read more

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