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Value Stocks

Finding value is all about buying something at a discount to what it’s actually worth. The same is true of value stocks.

Sometimes factors can cause a stock to get beaten down to the point of being undervalued. Value investing is about finding stocks that are worth more than their current share price.

Investment legends like Sir John Templeton, Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett realized decades before behavioral finance became a respected academic discipline that systematic psychological errors tend to create market inefficiencies. Templeton, Graham and Buffett reasoned that herding behavior (including momentum traders and short-term speculators that chase price trends) and overreaction bias (the tendency of people to overreact to bad news) are strong forces in the market that can push stocks far below their fair value.

Based on these observations, many of the world’s greatest investors look for stocks that are beaten down by the market due to bad news or negative rumors. Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing, constantly searched for companies that once fetched sky-high valuations but that crashed when the companies were unable to deliver on investors’ expectations.

Warren Buffett famously said, “We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful.”

Value investing is about recognizing opportunities, spotting deep discounts and finding the next big turnaround stock. One way some investors measure a company’s value is its price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E. But P/E is a very simplistic measure of a stock’s value. Experts dig deeper, examining a company’s sales, cash flow, dividend, book value, debt levels, historical valuation patterns and more to determine if a stock is undervalued.

To help you find the next turnaround story, chief analyst Bruce Kaser writes the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor and Cabot Turnaround Letter. Both advisories have a proven track record of handily beating the market with some of the most unloved, left-for-dead stocks on the market … right before their comeback stories begin.

To subscribe to either of Bruce’s value investing advisories, click here.

Value Stocks Post Archives
Treating year-to-date performance as if the calendar is the kickoff to a football game is a mistake. For value investors, there’s a better way.
Vodafone stock is deeply out of favor, but a recent leadership change could be a turnaround catalyst for the telecom stock.
Proxy voting is often overlooked by retail investors, but an ongoing proxy battle could help turn the tides for this out-of-favor stock.
You probably hear the term EBITDA get tossed around a lot by investment analysts. But exactly what is EBITDA, and why is it useful?
Given the current macro conditions and expectations for a flat market ahead, investors can look to activists to unlock value in turnaround stocks. Here’s how.
Given the ongoing fallout from FTX and the collapse of cryptocurrency prices, it warrants revisiting our guide to becoming a “crypto billionaire” (on paper at least).
The housing market slowdown and overreaction to the previously overheated building environment make homebuilder stocks attractive targets for value investors.
As U.S. markets stall, European stocks are a good place to find growth right now. And these three stocks look particularly appealing.
Each era has a cult stock or investment that becomes a symbol of the excess of the era. Applying these value metrics can help you avoid them.
Value investors have a wide variety of tools at their disposal, and estimate revisions are one way they can avoid value traps.
Macro environment aside, this SaaS stock has all the hallmarks of a future sector leader and is poised to break out when the market turns.
Instead of hiding in cash, consider shares of this discounted value stock that offers strong fundamentals and a solid yield.
Growth has dominated value for years on Wall Street. But the tide appears to be turning, and INTC might be the best value stock out there.
Value investing has lagged growth investing for decades, but recent declines in the market are good news for contrarian investors.
Want to find return in this flat market? These two activist investor stocks look like prime turnaround candidates.