The Business of Value Investing.pdf

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Invest Significantly at the Maximum Point of Pessimism 185

has risen shall fall, and what has fallen shall soon rise again. Surely
not every stock that deteriorates will again rise — it ’ s up to you to
provide the thorough analysis and determine whether a superior
investment opportunity exists.
It ’ s not easy going at it alone and buying securities when every-
one is selling and companies are experiencing setbacks. Investing
during times when the market mood is at its worst requires inves-
tors to be comfortable with the fact that prices could go lower still.
Many investors have a misguided fascination with trying to buy at
the bottom and sell at the top. That idea rests on the belief that
investors can time markets perfectly, suggesting that the quoted
price of the stock is the central object of focus. Value - oriented
investors, however, rely on the stock price only in as much as it
serves to determine whether the business is undervalued. And as
is often the case, value investors usually buy before the bottom is
reached and sell before the absolute top. But what counts is what
happens in between: buying low even though the price may go
lower and then selling high even though the price may go higher.
In the end, the result is a gain on investment. Also, armed with
the knowledge that the security is undervalued, investors have the
added benefi t of buying more as the price declines and thus get-
ting an even greater bargain. The result of the value approach is
ultimately a win - win for value investors. They buy cheap regardless
of whether the purchase is being made at the bottom. Should the
price decline further still, value investors see this as an even better
opportunity to buy more for less.
The late Benjamin Graham and David Dodd summed up their
investment philosophy brilliantly in a passage from their seminal
work Security Analysis. During Graham ’ s day, the concept of value
investing was oxymoronic in the sense that if you weren ’ t invest-
ing with the goal of buying assets for less than they ’ re worth, then
you were speculating. The term “ value investing ” was not even
used 60 years ago during Graham ’ s time, but what Graham and

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