Tag Archive for 'Valuation'

Calculator Predicts Poor Long-Term Stock Returns Due to Stock Valuation Effect

Calculator Predicts Poor Long-Term Stock Returns Due to Stock Valuation Effect










Purcellville, VA (PRWEB) July 5, 2006

The S&P stock index is likely to provide a real return of less than 3 percent over the next 20 years. So reports a new calculator that employs regression analysis on historical stock-return data going back to 1870.

“Investors have been misled by reports on what the historical data says that ignore the effect of changes in stock valuation,” said Rob Bennett, co-author of the new calculator. “Today’s stock valuation level is not at all typical, and it is not realistic to expect stocks to generate typical returns again until stocks are again being sold at reasonable prices.”

Bennett is founder of the Financial Freedom Community (a group of internet discussion boards). He co-authored The Stock-Return Predictor calculator with John Walter Russell and is the creator of the Valuation-Informed Indexing approach to investing. Russell has been engaged for over four years in breakthrough research on the effect of changes in stock valuation levels on long-term stock returns.

The new investing calculator is available free of charge at web sites run by Bennett and Russell. The calculator page at Bennett’s site is — http://www.passionsaving.com/stock-valuation.html. The calculator page at Russell’s site is — http://www.early-retirement-planning-insights.com/stock-return-predictor.html.

The historical stock-return data shows the most-likely 30-year real return for purchases of the S&P index made today to be 5.3 percent (with a range of possibilities stretching from 3.4 percent to 7.4 percent). The outlook is considerably darker for the more immediate future, however. The calculator reports a most-likely 10-year return of 1.3 percent (with a range of possibilities stretching from a negative 4.7 percent to a positive 7.3 percent). For 20 years, the most likely return is 2.7 percent (with a range of possibilities stretching from a negative 1.3 percent to a positive 6.7 percent).

Robert Shiller, John Bogle, Warren Buffett, William Bernstein and other stock investing experts have often warned investors that it is not reasonable to expect the sorts of returns that fueled the bull market of the 1980s and 1990s now that valuations have reached such high levels. Until publication of the calculator, though, stock investors have not had a means of quantifying the valuation effect and of thereby putting advice to be wary of the effect of valuation changes to significant practical use.

Rob Bennett writes the daily “Financial Freedom Blog” and is the author of “Passion Saving: The Path to Plentiful Free Time and Soul-Satisfying Work.” His next book, “Investing for Humans: How to Get What Works on Paper to Work in Real Life,” is slated for publication in 2008.

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Valuation Matters ? Nortel Networks Today Versus 5 Years Ago

Valuation Matters – Nortel Networks Today Versus 5 Years Ago










Toronto, Ontario (PRWEB) July 2, 2006

The rise and fall of Nortel Networks (NT) is a classic story of why valuation matters. Just five years ago, Nortel had 95,000 employees. Today, this technology company has about 35,000 with plans to cut another 1,100. During the tech boom, its stock price became grossly overvalued based on every analytical measure. In fact, it had negative earnings –which made calculating the Price Earnings ratio impossible. The madness of the crowd ignored logic and let greed take over.

Circa the turn of the millennium, the crowd was saying that the market could only go higher—and analytical measures like Price/Earnings (P/E) ratios were antiquated tools that do not apply to the new economy. The P/E ratio allows an investor to know how much they are paying for earnings – generally lower means cheaper. The S&P 500 peaked in March 2000 with a whopping P/E of 42 – an earnings yield of just 2.4%. The tech laden NASDAQ’s P/E ratio was even higher. Eventually, the stock market crashed and valuation levels returned to historical averages.

Many investors lost the majority of their retirement savings—forgetting a golden rule of investing: buy low and sell high. One friend of ours “invested” her life’s savings in Nortel. Nortel Networks soared to over $ 80 USD during the boom. Today it trades around $ 2 USD – a whopping 97% decline in price! Our friend lost all her savings and was forced to move home with her parents.

A smart investor knows that market timing is a key success factor to building and maintaining wealth. Investor genius Warren Buffett made billions by buying the right companies at the right time – when “value screamed”! He wisely avoided the recent ‘tech bubble’ and kept his fortune in tact. The legendary value investor Benjamin Graham said it the best, “In the short run the market is a voting machine; in the long run it is a weighing machine.”

From a valuation perspective, the Price Earnings ratio of the S&P 500 is currently close to its long-run historical average of 16. In our opinion, now is a rational time to buy value stocks with a margin of safety. Recently, guru Warren Buffett has been buying equities such as Lexmark International (LXK), United Parcel Services (UPS), General Electric (GE), and ConocoPhillips (COP) —a validation of our analysis that the S&P 500 is now rationally priced.

The Nortel Networks story contains a few important lessons. Don’t follow the crowd and let greed cloud your judgment. Only buy stocks that can be rationally valued – because valuation matters.

Disclosure: The Contrarian Investing Association currently advises its members to study Lexmark International.

About Contrarian Investing Association:

The Contrarian Investing Association looks for companies that are undervalued by the market for the wrong reasons, believing that the market will come to appreciate their true value over time. Our investing approach can be described as Contrarian, since such stocks are purchased when most investors believe that they are unattractive.

The Association has over 10,000 members across Canada, United States, United Kingdom and Japan.

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Applied Value Investing: The Practical Application of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett’s Valuation Principles to Acquisitions, Catastrophe Pricing and Business Execution

Applied Value Investing: The Practical Application of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett’s Valuation Principles to Acquisitions, Catastrophe Pricing and Business Execution

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Since Benjamin Graham fathered value investing in the 1930s, the method of analysis has spawned a large number of highly successful investors, such as Graham’s own former student and employee, Warren Buffett, who is regarded as one of the most successful investors of modern times. Over the years, numerous books have been published on Benjamin Graham’s approach. Most of these books present different interpretations of value investing and are generally intr

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Valuation Matters Part 1 The Stock Market is WRONG FRAT VidEx


Valuation Matters; Therefore, The Stock Market is Wrong! February 27th, 2009, By ChuckC of TheMarketsUpChuck.com Part 1 of 2 focuses on stock market valuation. Warren Buffett once lamented that For some reason, people take their cues from price action rather than from values. The dumbest reason in the world to buy a stock is because its going up. And Peter Lynch of Fidelity Magellan fame said in his New York Times bestseller One Up on Wall Street Just because you buy a stock and it goes up does not mean you are right. Just because you buy a stock and it goes down does not mean you are wrong. Both of these renowned gurus are acknowledging the undeniable fact that the stock market can often grossly over or under value a company. During the irrational exuberant period of the late 1990s the market was overpricing stocks to the extreme. Today, the stock market is undervaluing stocks to an opposite extreme. As overvaluation was the precursor to horrible long-term results, todays mirror image is the beginning of a great long-term opportunity. Valuation and earnings growth are the true determents of future return. Watch our Frat™ Videx™ for the compelling and undeniable evidence! Ultimately the owners of any company, public or private, will derive their economic reward from the cash flow the underlying business generates or earns. Therefore, determining risk and reward is truly a straightforward and simple exercise. You merely forecast the income you expect and measure it against

Applied Value Investing: The Practical Application of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett’s Valuation Principles to Acquisitions, Catastrophe Pricing and Business Execution

  • ISBN13: 9780071628181
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
Since Benjamin Graham fathered value investing in the 1930s, the method of analysis has spawned a large number of highly successful investors, such as Graham’s own former student and employee, Warren Buffett, who is regarded as one of the most successful investors of modern times. Over the years, numerous books have been published on Benjamin Graham’s approach. Most of these books present different interpretations of value inves… More >>

Applied Value Investing: The Practical Application of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett’s Valuation Principles to Acquisitions, Catastrophe Pricing and Business Execution