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Published: July 27, 2009
In a perfectly efficient market, we could never
buy a stock at a discount or sell one at a premium. Every
security would be perfectly priced, all the time.
It’s only through irrational, emotion-driven selling that value
investors will occasionally get the chance to pick up a $50
stock for $25 a share, or maybe even less.
Value investors are the bargain-hunters of the investment world.
Our job can be tough when the market is booming and nobody wants
to part with their stocks. But when the cries of "sell" reach a
crescendo and investors can't exit their positions fast enough,
shopping is good. Yet these opportunities come around once or
twice a decade.
The last time the market traded at such marked-down prices was
in 2002. Stocks went into recovery mode shortly thereafter and
rebounded almost +30% during the next 12 months. Few investors
would turn their nose up at such a gain today. But that increase
in valuation was in the overall market. Plenty of individual
stocks netted investors ten times that.
As fear flooded the market and corrupted rational decision
making, downtrodden investors were willing to sell outstanding
companies for a fraction of their value. Research In Motion
(Nasdaq: RIMM) went for a split-adjusted $5 a share. Apple
(Nasdaq: AAPL) sold for just $12.
Forward-looking investors who took advantage of the rampant
pessimism have since been rewarded with massive gains of more
than +1,370% for RIMM and more than +1210% for AAPL. And those
are hardly isolated examples.
That's why long-term investors should cheer the irrational
dumping of high-quality securities. If you walked into Best Buy
or Target and found row after row of brand-name merchandise
marked down -40% or more, you would probably load up the
shopping cart. Investors don't shop that way. They tend to fear
massive stock declines rather than embrace them as windows of
opportunity.
The investors who throw in the towel miss the chance for big
gains. Now is the time to buy, not sell.
The First Signal:
Low P/E Ratios
Price/earnings ratios can offer clues as to whether a
stock is undervalued. Comparisons are best made within
industries, evaluating companies against their peers or
with their own historical valuation.
If a company with an undamaged outlook typically
commands 20 times earnings but is suddenly selling at
10, its stock might be a strong value play.
During the past 20 years, the |
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| S&P 500 has
traded at an average P/E of 20.5. It now trades at 15.5
times earnings. Ninety-nine of the index's 500 holdings
have earnings multiples below 10. The last time P/E
multiples fell this low was in 1997. Stocks then
rocketed to new highs, enjoying a multi-year rally. |
The Second Signal:
Price-to-Earnings Growth Ratios
PEs aren't perfect: They show the
past. What about a company's growth
potential? Two stocks trading at
identical P/E ratios might seem
equally valued. But what if the
first company were expected to
deliver earnings growth of +10% and
the second was projected to grow
+20%?
All things being equal, you'd
clearly prefer the second company.
Companies that may seem expensive on
the surface can turn out to be
undervalued once their future growth
potential is factored in. Investors
who automatically dismiss stocks
with seemingly high P/Es could be
missing out on some of the market's
most extraordinary opportunities.
To determine this, use the
price-to-earnings growth or "PEG"
ratio. It's calculated by dividing
the P/E ratio by a company’s annual
earnings-per-share growth.
Slow-growth companies have a higher
PEG ratio than faster-growing
companies. A company with a PEG
ratio of one or less is considered
to be a good investment.
Legendary money manager Peter Lynch
said that when you find a stock with
25% growth trading at just 20 times
earnings, it's time to "back up the
truck." A modest earnings multiple
with a low PEG ratio is a recipe for
profits -- one that gets richer as
the P/E ratio falls.
The Third Signal: Dividend Payouts
The S&P’s current dividend yield of
2.8% is 100 basis points higher than
two years ago. There are scads of
double-digit yielders out there
whose rich yields will evaporate as
the market's valuation returns to
historical norm. Investors who buy
while yields are high capture these
outsize payout rates. They not only
collect a rich income stream, they
also are in line for robust capital
gains when the overall market picks
up.
| Aberdeen Australia Equity Fund
(AMEX: IAF) saw its yield spike up
in August 2007. Investors who bought
to capture the yield of 11% saw
their shares jump from $12.50 to
$17.50 in less than two months. This just goes to show how quickly
these high yields can disappear if
you don't lock them in.
Now Is the Time to Get In
There are two ways to look at |
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| this year long sell-off. It's either a
nightmare or a dream come true. |
Yes, most of the companies you
follow (or own) are down alarmingly
from their peaks. But as Warren
Buffett astutely reminds us,
successful investors don't rent
stocks, they own businesses. And
right now, many of the world's most
powerful companies can be purchased
at low prices and with yields that
haven't been seen in decades.
Thanks to the market's
manic-depressive mood swings, you
can take advantage of this clearance
sale and make your investment
dollars work harder. But as
investors come to their senses,
these deals will disappear.
-- Nathan Slaughter
Editor
Half-Priced Stocks |