I'm not sure exactly how to counter this and improve my investment style except to revert back to a more disciplined model; buy only with a real margin of safety and sell when shares reach 90 % of
intrinsic value NO MATTER WHAT.
Not exact matches
Although
value investors would argue that it's the
intrinsic value relative to the price that
matter the most, a more compelling investment thesis would be high growth potential at a cheap price.
At any one time, the psychological influences (i.e., how the financial community is appraising these more fundamental
matters of
intrinsic value) will cause the price of the particular stock to be anywhere from well above this line to well below it.
This is to deny them any
intrinsic value to themselves and for that
matter to God.
Doesn't
matter what Venezuela presents as currency... if the
intrinsic value of that currency is hamstrung by an incompetent government.
But if the end result — conservation — is the same, it
matters not whether in the short term we say we are conserving this field of fritillary because it has
intrinsic value, or because class 2C would like to study it for their next science project.
I believe a successful teacher is one that can awaken the curiosity of their students, illustrate the
intrinsic value of the subject
matter, and foster understanding rather than memorization.
Intrinsic motivation plays a major factor too and a child that is motivated to learn will learn no
matter how much their parents do or do not
value education.
If you know what the company is worth, then change in
intrinsic value is all that is going to
matter.
Thus if you purchase with a discount to your
intrinsic value (say a margin of safety of 30, 40 or 50 %) it doesn't
matter if the share price goes down; in fact this is only an opportunity to purchase MORE of the company at an even GREATER discount.
No
matter what happens to the economy gold will always be gold and therefore it holds an
intrinsic value.
As for price itself: If you have a strong conviction regarding the
intrinsic value of a stock, does it really
matter if its upside potential's shrunk from (say) 120 % to 80 %?!
As always, it isn't necessarily about the closing of a possible
value gap, what really
matters is potential growth in
intrinsic value itself (based on Record's actual revenue & earnings over the next five years).
The only thing that
matters is the
intrinsic value of the company.
That get's us to when book
value doesn't
matter —
intrinsic value.
It doesn't
matter how much my house is worth on the market because it has an
intrinsic value.
The
intrinsic value is the same no
matter how much money it costs.
In that context I already expressed my view that the point in time when negotiations took (or would have taken) place doesn't
matter as long as the
intrinsic value of a patent is determined without post-standardization monopoly power.
Hourly paid workers must be compensated by a governmant imposed minimum common amount per hour, no
matter what type of work (within certain disciplines), no
matter how productive they are, no
matter what
intrinsic value those workers and their job descriptions add to the economics of the various ventures.