I've been a financial advisor for over 14 years, and completely agree with you; boring makes for good investing. Most people don't react well to "exciting" investments, because as soon as the excitement goes the wrong way, they freak out! Give me boring old banks, insurance companies, railroads and oil companies any day...
What's the most valuable metric for determining what are Value stocks? Is it just PE and PB ratio? Or are there other factors to identify these stocks?
I'm also curious if you've ever heard of Benjamin Graham's "net-net" stocks. Basically where you buy the company for less than working capital. Do you know whether these are still a good opportunity for outperformance?
I've been a financial advisor for over 14 years, and completely agree with you; boring makes for good investing. Most people don't react well to "exciting" investments, because as soon as the excitement goes the wrong way, they freak out! Give me boring old banks, insurance companies, railroads and oil companies any day...
Good article.
this article was so boring, loved it
Boring is Best
Seems that way!
Great content as always! Fantastic work!
Thanks!
Great content
Thanks Erick!
Once again, another blog with very helpful information, without having to read dozens of pages in order to find the golden nuggets. Thank you!
Thank you Alex! Glad you like it :)
What's the most valuable metric for determining what are Value stocks? Is it just PE and PB ratio? Or are there other factors to identify these stocks?
I'm also curious if you've ever heard of Benjamin Graham's "net-net" stocks. Basically where you buy the company for less than working capital. Do you know whether these are still a good opportunity for outperformance?
If Boring companies are great winners, how can this be barbelled against innovators? (increased returns relative to negligible risk)
humanity dont deserve this kind of excelent Info. Thank you so much