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Not exact matches
In How to Beat The Little
Book That Beats The Market: Redux (and Part 2) I showed how in
Quantitative Value we tested Joel Greenblatt's Magic Formula outlined in The Little
Book That (Still) Beats the Market).
Graham & Dodd advise a number of strategies to find
value stocks, ranging from qualitative factors like identifying industry trends and a company's management team to
quantitative factors like
book value, P / E ratio, and sales - to - price.
As with Wes» previous
book,
Quantitative Value: A Practitioner's Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors, DIY Financial Advisor is chock full of both anecdotes and analytical results.
A more detailed description of each step is offered in the post «Our
Quantitative Value Philosophy,» which is a much abbreviated version of the
book.
Quantitative Value, co-written by Gray and Tobias Carlisle, is a solid piece of research that combines the successful value investing framework of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett with the analytical rigor seen in Jim O'Shaughnessy's What Works on Wall Street and Joel Greenblatt's The Little Book that Beats the Ma
Value, co-written by Gray and Tobias Carlisle, is a solid piece of research that combines the successful
value investing framework of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett with the analytical rigor seen in Jim O'Shaughnessy's What Works on Wall Street and Joel Greenblatt's The Little Book that Beats the Ma
value investing framework of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett with the analytical rigor seen in Jim O'Shaughnessy's What Works on Wall Street and Joel Greenblatt's The Little
Book that Beats the Market.
In early 2013, Wiley published the
book Quantitative Value, A Practitioner's Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors, which Wesley co-authored with Tobias Carlisle.
Quantitative Value isn't even his first
book.
Among the many great ideas and anecdotes conveyed in the
book Quantitative Value, one is about the crash of the B - 17 Flying Fortress during a test flight at Wright Air Field in Dayton, Ohio.
-LSB-...]
book Super Crunchers, which I found via Andrew McAfee's Harvard Business Review blog post, The Future of Decision Making: Less Intuition, More Evidence (discussed in Intuition and the
quantitative value investor).
-LSB-...] the How to beat The Little
Book That Beats The Market (Part 1 2, and 3) series of posts I showed how in
Quantitative Value we tested Joel Greenblatt's Magic -LSB-...]
Fans of Mr. Carlisle's previous
book,
Quantitative Value, will also appreciate the market research he sprinkles throughout Deep
Value.
Posted in About,
Quantitative investment, Stocks,
Value Investment, tagged Price - to -
book Value,
Quantitative,
Value Investment on March 1, 2010 3 Comments»
I agree with your comment about momentum and a
book called «
Quantitative Value».
-LSB-...] the How to beat The Little
Book That Beats The Market (Part 1 2, and 3) series of posts I showed how in
Quantitative Value we tested Joel Greenblatt's Magic Formula -LSB-...]
We wrote a
book on winnowing the cheap stocks down into an investable portfolio called
Quantitative Value.
-LSB-...] This is a test forum for Greenbackd suggested by commenters rational and ShadowStock (@JournalofValue) created initially to discuss the
book Quantitative Value (https://greenbackd.com/2012/12/26/
quantitative-
value-a-practitioners-guide-to-automating-intelligent-…).
Your comments on momentum, in regards to your
book on
quantitative value investing, are appreciated.
Hmm, I don't know if momentum fits in a
book called «
Quantitative Value».
If you liked The Little
Book that Beats the Market, you will love
Quantitative Value.
Posted in About,
Book, Catalysts, Contrarian investment, Strategy Tagged
Book,
Quantitative Value 95 Comments
I am a big fan of your
book,
Quantitative Value, and have already placed a pre-order for your next
book on Amazon to be published later this year.
They launch their first ETF aptly called Alpha Architect's
Quantitative Value (QVAL) on 20 October, which will follow the strategy outlined in the
book.
Among investors, he is best known for his pioneering work in
quantitative analysis, described in his
book What Works on Wall Street: A Guide to the Best - Performing Investment Strategies of All Time, and which sought to finally answer the question of what works best —
value or growth investing.
We wrote an article for the April issue of
Value Investing Letter giving an overview of Quantitative Value, discussing the quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple
Value Investing Letter giving an overview of
Quantitative Value, discussing the quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to
Quantitative Value, discussing the quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple
Value, discussing the
quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to
quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple
value model outlined in the
book, and applying it to Apple In...
In the How to beat The Little
Book That Beats The Market (Part 1 2, and 3) series of posts I showed how in
Quantitative Value we tested Joel Greenblatt's Magic Formula (outlined in The Little
Book That (Still) Beats the Market) and found that it had consistently outperformed the market, and with lower relative risk than the market.
We wrote an article for the April issue of
Value Investing Letter giving an overview of Quantitative Value, discussing the quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple Inc. (A
Value Investing Letter giving an overview of
Quantitative Value, discussing the quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple
Quantitative Value, discussing the quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple Inc. (A
Value, discussing the
quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple
quantitative value model outlined in the book, and applying it to Apple Inc. (A
value model outlined in the
book, and applying it to Apple Inc. (AAPL).
Wes and I put the Magic Formula under the microscope in our
book Quantitative Value.
He is best known as the author of the websites The Acquirer's Multiple ® and Greenbackd, and the
books Concentrated Investing: Strategies of the World's Greatest Concentrated
Value Investors (2016, Wiley Finance), Deep
Value: Why Activists Investors and Other Contrarians Battle for Control of Losing Corporations (2014, Wiley Finance), and
Quantitative Value: A Practitioner's Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors (2012, Wiley Finance).
Research featured in the
books Deep
Value: Why Activist Investors and Other Contrarians Battle for Control of Losing Corporations (hardcover, 240 pages, Wiley Finance, 2014) and
Quantitative Value: A Practitioner's -LSB-...]
I like where you are going with your
book idea on
quantitative value investing strategies.
Big fan of your blog, but I've just started reading
Quantitative Value - apologies if you already pre-answered any of these questions in that
book.
Taking Greenblatt's approach a step further (if you want to dive deep into
value investing and try to swim with the sharks) is a book by Wesley Gray and Tobias Carlisle called «Quantitative Value: A Practitioner's Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors.&r
value investing and try to swim with the sharks) is a
book by Wesley Gray and Tobias Carlisle called «
Quantitative Value: A Practitioner's Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors.&r
Value: A Practitioner's Guide to Automating Intelligent Investment and Eliminating Behavioral Errors.»
Like the
book What Works on Wall Street,
Quantitative Value suffers from over-optimization.
He has gained a lot of fame and respect mainly as an author on his website named Greenbackd, but he has also earned a special place in the finance world due to his
books,
Quantitative Value and Deep
Value.
While
quantitative approaches often tend to focus on technical analysis, this
book will appeal more to
value investors given that it examines the theory of why each fundamental factor works and it relegates technical analysis to just one chapter on price momentum.
I've just finished Ian Ayres's
book Super Crunchers, which I found via Andrew McAfee's Harvard Business Review blog post, The Future of Decision Making: Less Intuition, More Evidence (discussed in Intuition and the
quantitative value investor).
-LSB-...] the How to beat The Little
Book That Beats The Market (Part 1 2, and 3) series of posts I showed how in
Quantitative Value we tested Joel Greenblatt's -LSB-...]
Posted in About,
Quantitative investment, Stocks Tagged
Book value, Joel Greenblatt, Magic Formula, Quant Investing 33 Comments
Over the weekend, while watching the Orioles win yet another series on their way to an American League title, I spent some time with a new e-
book called
Quantitative Value Investing in Europe: What Works for Achieving Alpha... Where the study really gets interesting is when the authors combine low price to book value with six - month relative stre
Value Investing in Europe: What Works for Achieving Alpha... Where the study really gets interesting is when the authors combine low price to
book value with six - month relative stre
value with six - month relative strength.