The Business of Value Investing.pdf

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228 The Business of Value Investing

of this suggests that, over time, the market will value such excep-
tional fundamentals with an increasing multiple, leading to an even
greater value of the business.
In thinking about how much to pay for such growth, the issue
depends on what metric or metrics are most useful to the investor
in determining what to pay for the future growth of a business. The
P/E ratio naturally stands out as the default foundational metric on
which to rely. Just as the name implies, the price to earnings (P/E)
ratio refl ects the current price multiple investors are willing to pay
for a company ’ s earnings. On the whole, the lower the P/E, the
more attractive the investment from a value - oriented perspective.
Of course, a P/E alone doesn ’ t do the trick.
First, the quality of earnings of a business should be consid-
ered. For example, a company like Proctor & Gamble, which has
historically traded for around 12 to 18 times earnings, should not
be immediately dismissed compared to a similar company that
might be trading for 7 times earnings. Proctor & Gamble has dec-
ades of earnings history that demonstrate the quality of earnings
to be as dependable as any investor might wish for. The company
has also increased dividends for as many years as you might wish
to go back. So, naturally, the quality and dependability of the
growth over a period of years should weigh heavily on an investor ’ s
consideration with regard to the appropriate multiple of earn-
ings to pay. The characteristics of an investment operation would
certainly justify paying 12 times earnings for a Proctor & Gamble
type business that has grown sales and profi ts for decades through
various economic cycles rather than paying 7 times earnings for
a business that could suffer a substantial decline in profi ts or
even an operating loss during any abrupt change in the business
environment.
Naturally, a value investor would employ painstaking effort in
both trying to pay the least expensive price (i.e., low P/E) coupled
with the greatest potential upside for increased growth. Proctor &

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