Invest Significantly at the Maximum Point of Pessimism 177
The fi rst three steps of the value investing framework rely
principally on analysis and research. While business valuation
does incorporate an element of art, most of the valuation process
is based on facts and statistical data. The remainder of the value
investing framework — discipline to say no, patience, and investing
at maximum points of pessimism — becomes much more diffi cult to
apply because it relies not on intelligence or IQ level but more on
temperament and emotion.
The discipline to say no goes beyond application to individual
securities. When presented with a security that is trading for sub-
stantially less than intrinsic value, the decision then rests on deter-
mining if the business meets the standards of quality and soundness
that will allow for (a) intrinsic value to increase over time and
(b) existence of future catalysts that will cause the stock price to
reach intrinsic value. Vastly more important is staying away from
the market euphoria that often leads to infl ated prices. One of the
core tenets of value investing is that whatever area of the market
the masses fi nd attractive is the area with little or no value at all.
For example, the 38-percent market decline in the Standard &
Poor’s 500 Index in 2008, the worst performance since 1931, led
to a massive exodus to the safety of U.S. Treasury securities. The
desire for the safety of cash was so high that the 3 - month Treasury
note was, at one point, actually yielding 0 percent. The 30 - year
Treasury was yielding only 2.53 percent, the lowest level in dec-
ades. 2 Frightened investors were willing to accept a negative real
rate of return in exchange for the safety of principal. Yet with the
United States government fully dedicated to fl ooding the markets
with newly printed dollars in order to resuscitate the economy, it
seems very likely that U.S. Treasuries are not the place to be at the
present moment. Having the discipline to say no and go against
the popular sentiment of the day requires investors to separate
themselves from the masses. It is not easy to make such a decision,
especially in the short run when it seems that the lone man out
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