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Value Stocks

Finding value is all about buying something at a discount to what it’s actually worth. The same is true of value stocks.

Sometimes factors can cause a stock to get beaten down to the point of being undervalued. Value investing is about finding stocks that are worth more than their current share price.

Investment legends like Sir John Templeton, Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett realized decades before behavioral finance became a respected academic discipline that systematic psychological errors tend to create market inefficiencies. Templeton, Graham and Buffett reasoned that herding behavior (including momentum traders and short-term speculators that chase price trends) and overreaction bias (the tendency of people to overreact to bad news) are strong forces in the market that can push stocks far below their fair value.

Based on these observations, many of the world’s greatest investors look for stocks that are beaten down by the market due to bad news or negative rumors. Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing, constantly searched for companies that once fetched sky-high valuations but that crashed when the companies were unable to deliver on investors’ expectations.

Warren Buffett famously said, “We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful.”

Value investing is about recognizing opportunities, spotting deep discounts and finding the next big turnaround stock. One way some investors measure a company’s value is its price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E. But P/E is a very simplistic measure of a stock’s value. Experts dig deeper, examining a company’s sales, cash flow, dividend, book value, debt levels, historical valuation patterns and more to determine if a stock is undervalued.

To help you find the next turnaround story, Cabot offers both Cabot Value Investor and Cabot Turnaround Letter. Both advisories are intended for investors who place an added emphasis on company fundamentals and undervalued opportunities.

Value Stocks Post Archives
There are plenty of stocks under $5, but few of them offer much value. And the distinction between cheap and low-priced is an important one.
To answer the question, what is value investing, try to find opportunities and spot deep discounts. These criteria can help.
Growth has trounced value over the last five years, but is value investing dead? Here are six facts that should make you think twice.
The PEG ratio is frequently used as a convenient rule of thumb, but its sole use can produce wildly wrong valuations. Here’s why.
Should the much-hyped Magnificent Seven rally peter out, investors will need to look elsewhere for solid returns. Following activist shareholders is a promising starting point.
Charlie Munger, a legendary investor and former vice chair of Berkshire Hathaway, recently passed away at 99. Here are a few lessons he left us with, and his final investments.
Modern warfare is rapidly evolving beyond the scope of legacy defense companies. This small-cap defense stock is poised to benefit.
A little known Benjamin Graham strategy for investing success is buying bonds -- and holding them -- in your investment portfolio.
New leadership and a fresh perspective led the Lions to victory over the Chiefs on Thursday night while offering a valuable lesson in turnaround investing.
Warren Buffett became the world’s greatest investor by finding undervalued stocks. These three big oil stocks look right up his alley.
Apple’s (AAPL) consumer loyalty and brand quality offer appeal to every investor, but are the shares attractive to a value investor?
Negative enterprise value stocks are hard to find. But having outperformed the market by more than 5-to-1, they’re worth hunting for.
Small-cap value stocks have been an underperforming asset class for years, but a few individual names are worthy of closer looks.
You may have seen the term “EBITDA” used in the financial media, but what exactly is it, and why do investors care?
The economic stage has been set for a new bull market, but what’s a value investor to do as growth stocks drag the indexes higher?