09-13-2019, 07:22 PM
I really like this recent article by Chuck Carnevale, explaining his philosophy on value at time of purchase. He is far more eloquent and a more effective writer when it comes to conveying these concepts than I could ever hope to be:
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4290081...ket-timing
Short-term fluctuations in price don’t really concern me on a long-term time horizon. I will never buy any stock at the absolute bottom. That’s market timing. I can’t do that. All I can do is decide if value is fair or better at the time of purchase.
A stock that is 30% above its long-term average P/E, with a current price 7% higher than where it should be with a historically average P/E in more than two years carries too high of a value risk for how I analyze purchases. When that stock is forecast to grow earnings by only single-digit percentages over the next two years, that coupled with the current low yield indicates to me that the income stream I will be purchasing is not the best use of capital I can make. If MCD had a current yield like T, or was forecasting 25% annualized growth, my opinion would certainly change.
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4290081...ket-timing
Short-term fluctuations in price don’t really concern me on a long-term time horizon. I will never buy any stock at the absolute bottom. That’s market timing. I can’t do that. All I can do is decide if value is fair or better at the time of purchase.
A stock that is 30% above its long-term average P/E, with a current price 7% higher than where it should be with a historically average P/E in more than two years carries too high of a value risk for how I analyze purchases. When that stock is forecast to grow earnings by only single-digit percentages over the next two years, that coupled with the current low yield indicates to me that the income stream I will be purchasing is not the best use of capital I can make. If MCD had a current yield like T, or was forecasting 25% annualized growth, my opinion would certainly change.