Investment dictionary

VALUE INVESTING

Value Investing: translation

The strategy of selecting stocks that trade for less than their intrinsic values. Value investors actively seek stocks of companies that they believe the market has undervalued. They believe the market overreacts to good and bad news, resulting in stock price movements that do not correspond with the company's long-term fundamentals. The result is an opportunity for value investors to profit by buying when the price is deflated.

Typically, value investors select stocks with lower-than-average price-to-book or price-to-earnings ratios and/or high dividend yields.

The big problem for value investing is estimating intrinsic value. Remember, there is no "correct" intrinsic value. Two investors can be given the exact same information and place a different value on a company. For this reason, another central concept to value investing is that of "margin of safety". This just means that you buy at a big enough discount to allow some room for error in your estimation of value.

Also keep in mind that the very definition of value investing is subjective. Some value investors only look at present assets/earnings and don't place any value on future growth. Other value investors base strategies completely around the estimation of future growth and cash flows. Despite the different methodologies, it all comes back to trying to buy something for less than it is worth.

  1. value investingvalue investing translation In the context of asset management mutual funds and hedge funds the a style of investment that focuses on securities with low price to earning...Financial and business terms
  2. value investingфин. стоимостное инвестированиеu стратегия инвестирования при которой средства вкладываются в недооцененные акции с низким значением отношения цены к прибыли и цены к бал...Англо-русский экономический словарь