Dear Jon Choivo, Thank you for sharing your thoughts on investment, I appreciate your writing a lot. Malaysia needs people like you (generation Y) to make Malaysia great again. Wish you a Happy and Enlightenment investment. Thank you.
EPS says nothing about the quality of the profits.
EPS may not resemble true cash profits.
EPS may be based on profits that are unsustainably high or temporarily low. (This means that the PE ratio could be misleadingly low # or high. This is a particular problem for cyclical companies.)
# like Hengyuan. The low PE maybe misleading due to the unsustainably and/or temporarily high profits.
>>>Eh? Calvintaneng still alive? I tot you already run road because chasing by ALONG due to your big lose in
Bjcorp Mulpha Mui Pmcorp Alam Perisai Kbunai Etc
Alamak. Low life<<<
Can I attempt at guessing Calvintaneng's investing philosophy?
He is a follower of Graham's deep value investing.
From my understanding of Graham's teaching, I am not sure if he would have bought into these stocks at all.
Here is a Ben Graham Checklist for Finding Undervalued Stocks
Criterias
Risk 1. Earnings to price (the inverse of P/E) is double the high-grade corporate bond yield. If the high-grade bond yields 7%, then earnings to price should be 14%. 2. P/E ratio that is 0.4 times the highest average P/E achieved in the last 5 years. 3. Dividend yield is 2/3 the high-grade bond yield. 4. Stock price of 2/3 the tangible book value per share. 5. Stock price of 2/3 the net current asset value.
Financial strength 6. Total debt is lower than tangible book value. 7. Current ratio (current assets/current liabilities) is greater than 2. 8. Total debt is no more than liquidation value.
Earnings stability 9. Earnings have doubled in most recent 10 years. 10. Earnings have declined no more than 5% in 2 of the past 10 years.
This is very true. About 60% of my portfolio is great companies. 24% is good companies at fair price, about 28% is great company at cheap price.
==================================================================================== 4. Yet rather surprisingly, Benjamin Graham made a lot of money not from this strategy which he preached and held widely. His gains from one stock (GEICO) overshadowed and exceeded all the gains from all his other above transactions by a wide margin. For GEICO, he bought a company with great business and potential at a fair or undervalued price and he held this for a long term, enjoying the gains derived from its growing earning power. Warren Buffett was using Graham strategy in the first 20 years of his investing and changed to the Philip Fisher / Charlie Munger / Graham's GEICO strategy subsequently. For those with the right temperament, philosophy and strategy, the latter in my opinion is a better strategy to grow long term wealth ... steadily, confidently and with a high degree of probability of a good outcome.
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
Sslee
6,791 posts
Posted by Sslee > 2018-06-02 08:25 | Report Abuse
Dear Jon Choivo,
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on investment, I appreciate your writing a lot.
Malaysia needs people like you (generation Y) to make Malaysia great again. Wish you a Happy and Enlightenment investment.
Thank you.