Getting Started in Value Investing (Getting Started In…..)
An accessible introduction to the proven method of value investing
An ardent follower of Warren Buffett-the most high-profile value investor today-author Charles Mizrahi has long believed in the power of this proven approach. Now, with Getting Started in Value Investing, Mizrahi breaks down this successful strategy so that anyone can learn how to use it in his or her own investment endeavors. Written in a straightforward and accessible style, this book helps readers gain an overall understanding of the value approach to investing and presents statistics that reveal the overwhelming success of this approach through a variety of markets. Engaging and informative, Getting Started in Value Investing skillfully shows readers how to look for undervalued companies and provides them with the tools they need to succeed in today’s markets.
Charles S. Mizrahi (Brooklyn, NY) is Managing Partner of CGM Partners Fund LP. He is also editor of Hidden Values Alert, a monthly newsletter focused on value investing. Mizrahi has more than 25 years of investment experience and is frequently quoted in the press. Many of his articles appear online at gurufocus.com as well as on other financial sites.
Rating:
(out of 30 reviews)
List Price: $ 24.95
Price: $ 16.11
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#2 written by John Rutherford 1 year ago
Review by John Rutherford for Getting Started in Value Investing (Getting Started In…..)
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Value investing has proven time and time again that it is the most infallible method to build up one’s net worth. This type of investing disallows any “get-rich-quick” schemes. It is the methodical process of looking for strong companies with sound financials, priced below its intrinsic value, buying them and holding them until their intrinsic value is reached. Chances are, for them to reach their intrinsic value within a year is unrealistic. To give you an idea, a good value investor’s average holding period of a single stock is 5 years. Of the great ones that come to mind are: Warren Buffett, Benjamin Graham (known as the father of value investing), and David Dodd.Here’s a quick and short outline of what the book is about:
1. Value investing defined
2. Picking a stock with strong management, financials (very brief introduction of Income statement, Balance sheet, and Cash Flow Statement), market cap, and industry leadership
3. Learning different ratios and what they mean
4. An example as to how to value an individual stock priceThis book is very useful to someone who is new to investing. It gives a great introduction as to how to understand company numbers and how to use them. For the novice investor or for someone looking to try this out, it’s a great book. However, for those who are more advanced, this book might be a little too little. I fall on this latter category and I felt that there were things that could have been mentioned to a more thorough extent.
For example: I felt that the author should have provided a target as to when to sell. He just provides a guideline of when to buy. When to sell has always been a big question amongst value investors but a guideline would’ve been very helpful.
Also, in his example of earnings estimation for the next five years seemed too one-dimensional. Afterall, figuring something as complex as future earnings doesn’t take just one page to describe. There was no explanation as to the root of the earnings and what to look for.
With regards to the financials, it was very superficial.Thus I gave this book a four because of its brevity and lack of depth. However, as mentioned, it’s a great starting point. I would suggest starting here and maybe read “Security Analysis” by Benjamin Graham. This text is much more detailed, and a much drier read. However, this book is not a “dummies” book so some prior knowledge is needed.
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#3 written by Jonathan A. Cohen 1 year ago
Review by Jonathan A. Cohen for Getting Started in Value Investing (Getting Started In…..)
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Not many seniors in highschool enjoy reading books on anything; this book is loved by any person who has read a small portion of it! In “Getting Started in Value Investing,” Charles Mizrahi is able to grab the reader’s undivided attention, and the reader is also able to use the book as a reference. I am head of a investment club in school, and many of us in the group have read many books on investing and the stock market. “Getting Started in Value Investing” was definitely the most popular book in the club. It teaches a person things they would not be able to learn in any other place, and that you would never think about.
The book explains that the best investor is not the one who checks his blackberry every ten minutes to see how their stock is doing! One just needs to abide by a few simple rules, and then sit back! Some of the simple rules: You must make sure there is a margin between what you buy the stock at and what the real price is. You learn that you stick with a “great company,” and that management is very important to a great company. You also learn the basics of financial statements and the importantce of reading full annual reports (including the small print).
In the library of my school we carry a copy of this great book. At age 17, I can tell you personally this book is easy to read. Everyone should have this book. -
#4 written by Turley Muller 1 year ago
Review by Turley Muller for Getting Started in Value Investing (Getting Started In…..)
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Getting Started in Value Investing is a terrific guide for anyone studying the discipline of Value Investing. The text is also an excellent companion for experienced investors as well. The author does a excellent job explaining the Value Investing process. He presents the material in a manner that really helps the reader get in the Value Investing mindset. Regardless of investing experience and knowledge, all investors seeking better results will benefit from reading Charles Mizrahi’s book.Value Investing is one of the most written about subjects in the finance/investing space. There are dozens of books just covering methods of Warren Buffet specifically, plus dozens of other texts on the value approach. It’s never difficult to find this kind of reading material, yet it can be difficult to discern the truly meaningful content from the vast pool of titles. That being said, there are good number of Value Investing books that pretty much contain the same information thereby conveying same message. At least, that is what I have encountered from reading scores of writings on this subject.
Essentially, after reading many Value Investing guides, I began to have the notion that if I’ve read several, I must have read them all. Yet, When I discovered Getting Started in Value Investing, I quickly recognized that it was no ordinary investing guide. The value methodology and principals remain the same, but the presentation of the material and the manner the author delivers the message is highly effective. Mr. Mizrahi has unique and wonderful writing style that is entertaining and captive, allowing the material to really “sink-in”.
Getting Started in Value Investing is not just another investing book, and it’s not just a beginner’s manual either. It engages the reader, and the flow of information is so well organized that it reads effortlessly. Mizrahi’s examples and illustrative stories train the reader’s mind to think and operate in the Value Investing mental framework. Knowing the principals and methods to Value Investing is rather worthless unless they are properly practiced- when it counts- differentiating the noise from the news, when money is at stake.
I have come across little investment literature that provides level of beneficial information received from reading Mr. Mizrahi’s work. It’s helped shape my thinking- by adopting a stronger focus on value, which I have gained through the text’s memorable examples and pep-talks.
I truly found this book to be an instrumental addition to my library. The writing and explanation are excellent, and the examples and anecdotes are highly illustrative. The book provides the necessary tools and explanation for evaluating investments. In addition, and probably most important, the book succeeds with illustrating the proper mindset and thinking needed to take action. I recommend buying a copy.
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#5 written by Professor Donald Mitchell 1 year ago
Review by Professor Donald Mitchell for Getting Started in Value Investing (Getting Started In…..)
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What is value investing? It’s the idea of buying a part of a business through public shares at a significant discount to the true value of the business.If you studied efficient market theory in school, you are probably laughing right now . . . for that theory teaches that no one can buy any stock at a discount to its economic value. But consider that many stocks trade as much as 25 percent above and below their average price in any given year. Surely the value of a business doesn’t vary that much in 12 months.
Value investors believe that the market misprices securities about 10-15 percent of the time. If you can buy something for half its value, that should be a good deal. The challenge is to spot those mispriced situations.
Value investing has been around for a long time, but most of the earliest texts are hard for new investors to apply (such as Security Analysis by Graham and Dodd and Benjamin Graham’s The Intelligent Investor). I was pleasantly surprised to see that Mr. Mizrahi is well versed in both the original approaches to value investing and the adjustments made since then by legendary investors like Warren Buffett and Charles Munger. Mr. Mizrahi also displays a wonderful talent for making security analysis easy to understand and to apply. In the future when students of mine want to learn the basics of value investing, I will recommend this book.
I do recommend that if you decide to apply this approach that you keep in mind that almost all investors underperform the market averages over long periods of time (five years and more). You’ll have to be good at value investing to make it work. If it seems like more effort than it’s worth, you can now buy index funds that feature small cap, low P/E multiple stocks . . . the sort that have outperformed the overall market averages in the last several decades. Or you can invest along with value investors who run mutual funds . . . or even buy shares in Berkshire-Hathaway, which Buffett and Munger run.
Is value investing right for you? Yes, if you are determined to outperform the averages and are willing to do the necessary homework and stick with it. I believe that will be less than one percent of the people. After reading this book, you should have a better idea of whether you are a good candidate.
If you do decide you like the approach, you’ll need to dig into the resources that Mr. Mizrahi cites to learn more.
Let me give you a few cautions about the book:
1. The valuation method described in Chapter 9 is much simpler than what you should actually use. It’s better to use discounted cash flow valuations (which are mentioned but not described). If you want to use the test of a future P/E multiple, Mr. Mizrahi is a little generous in his approach. Many industries regularly have P/E multiples much higher and lower than the averages. Adjusting your targets for future P/E multiples to reflect where lower multiples have been the historic case is a good idea not sufficiently developed here.
2. Mr. Mizrahi is a great proponent of ROE (return on equity) as a measure of good performance. Current accounting rules and the share repurchase practices of many companies combine to make ROE not such a good measure as Mr. Mizrahi suggests. Why? Because equity is artificially low so that any earnings are seen a high return earnings.
3. Mr. Mizrahi appears to overstate the case for value investing being a way to outperform the market averages. Yes, some people do achieve that result, but there are no statistics on what percentage do and what percentage don’t. I suspect that many value investors don’t beat the averages over five year time periods.
4. Mr. Mizrahi explains the concept of economic moats around businesses that allow them to prosper relative to competitors. You should realize that most businesses are losing their moats pretty rapidly now as they face more global competitors than in the past. Only those who are already prospering in most of the countries in the world can be presumed to have good moats now . . . and those moats may erode in the future.
5. Mr. Mizrahi favors larger capitalization companies (over $10 billion in value) to evaluate for potential purchase. You won’t find the best buys in that group. Back testing shows that small capitalization companies usually do better on average.
6. Mr. Mizrahi recommends a definition for free cash flow that overstates actual cash availability. It would be better to add the cost in increased working capital to determine actual free cash flow.
7. A few of the tables Mr. Mizrahi supplies seem to have incorrect headings. Wherever you see the same heading repeated for two columns with different numbers, assume the headings are wrong and ignore those tables.
Nice work, Mr. Mizrahi!
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Review by jt for Getting Started in Value Investing (Getting Started In…..)
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Charles Mizrahi’s Getting Started in Value Investing is written so clearly that one might think at first reading that he is making the subject matter seem too simple. But that would be a wrong conclusion to reach. Rather, the book’s strength is precisely its deceptive simplicity. The more you read it and consider what Mizrahi is saying, the more you will realize that there is a way to make money in the stock market, and he shows you the way, how to focus on value and to make sure that the stock you are buying is fairly priced, and is likely to be far more highly priced if you are just willing to wait for a number of years. And, it should be added, the book is fun to read. Mizrahi knows his subject well (it’s clear he reads about companies and stocks carefully and for pleasure, and does so with a sort of passionate intensity), and he knows how to tell a story in a compelling manner.