It pays to
focus on the fundamental bottom - up investment approach, but you need patience to profit from it.
Not exact matches
«We remain highly
focused on our innovative food offerings, productivity, restaurant efficiency, and guest service mainly the core strength, which have been
fundamental to our measured expansion and long - term
bottom - line growth.»
Our mastery of
fundamental development services such as site selection and planning, private and public financing, and marketing and leasing, allows us to
focus on innovation — improving each project's marketability and
bottom line.
Employs an absolute value approach which includes a
fundamental,
bottom - up security selection process
focused on identifying securities with a meaningful discount to intrinsic value
The investment process at Canso is
focused on bottom up,
fundamental research and security selection.
The strategy seeks to capitalize
on structural inefficiencies in the marketplace and
focuses on fundamental,
bottom - up security selection.
Our job as long - term,
bottom - up investors is to filter out the noise and to
focus on fundamental valuations.
For over 30 years, Third Avenue has consistently pursued a
fundamental,
bottom - up approach to deep value investing: we
focus on the company's balance sheet, the value of its underlying assets, and the discounted price of its securities.
ECP Asset Management claim to use a
bottom up,
fundamental view of stock picking with a
focus on historical sales growth, return
on equity and interest cover.
Our
bottom - up proprietary research work
focuses on identifying high - potential investment candidates experiencing positive
fundamental change.
Value Partners employs a
bottom - up approach to stock selection, one that is based
on their value investing discipline and
focuses on intensive
fundamental research.
Utilizing a
bottom - up
fundamental process that
focuses on future growth in cash generation and return
on capital, the Fund may invest in companies of all sizes, including small and mid cap companies.
The
bottom line is that if you are trying to get a measure of how much treasury bond rates will change over the next year or two, you will be better served
focusing more
on changes in economic
fundamentals and less
on Jerome Powell and the Fed.