In support of this argument I cite generally Graham's experience, Oppenheimer's Ben Graham's Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update paper, Testing Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Value Strategy in London, a paper from the business -LSB-...]
In support of this argument I cite generally Graham's experience, Oppenheimer's Ben Graham's Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update paper, Testing Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Value Strategy in London, a paper from the business school of the University of Salford in the UK, and, more specifically, Bildersee, Cheh and Zutshi's The performance of Japanese common stocks in relation to their net current asset values, James Montier's Graham» s net - nets: outdated or outstanding?
-LSB-...] experience, Oppenheimer's Ben Graham's Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update paper, Testing Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Value Strategy in London, a paper from the business school of the University of Salford in the UK, and, more specifically, -LSB-...]
I'm going to follow my simple quantitative model — the Graham
net current asset value strategy — and take some positions in Japanese net nets.
In Testing Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Value Strategy in London (Word format), a paper from the business school of the University of Salford in the UK, the strategy was applied to stocks listed on the London Stock Exchange in the period 1980 to 2005.
In Ben Graham's Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update Professor Henry Oppenheimer examined the return on stocks selected using Benjamin Graham's
net current asset value strategy over the period 1970 to 1983.
Not exact matches
It may have been a
strategy similar to the annual rebalancing methodology discussed in Oppenheimer's Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update.
For those new to the site, my argument is that a systematic application of the deep
value methodologies like Benjamin Graham's liquidation
strategy (for example, as applied in Oppenheimer's Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update) or a low price - to - book
strategy (as described in Lakonishok, Shleifer, and Vishny's Contrarian Investment, Extrapolation and Risk) can lead to exceptional long - term investment returns in a fund.
Posted in About, Contrarian investment, Liquidation
Value,
Net Current Asset Value,
Net Quick Stocks,
Strategy, tagged Negative Enterprise
Value,
Net nets on December 11, 2012 8 Comments»
This is also known as balance sheet review, and a simple
strategy is to examine financial statements to calculate the
Net Current Asset Value (NCAV) of a company.
Graham's
net current asset value rule for acquiring sub-liquidation stocks is an example of such a simple, unambiguous investment
strategy; simple to calculate, with concrete rules for its application.
-LSB-...] Oppenheimer on Graham's liquidation
value strategy between 1970 and 1983, published in the paper Ben Graham's
Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update, indicates that «[the] mean return from net current asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -LSB-.
Net Current Asset Values: A Performance Update, indicates that «[the] mean return from net current asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -L
Current Asset Values: A Performance Update, indicates that «[the] mean return from net current asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -LSB
Asset Values: A Performance Update, indicates that «[the] mean return from
net current asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -LSB-.
net current asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -L
current asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -LSB
asset stocks for the 13 - year period was -LSB-...]
Posted in About, Contrarian investment, Liquidation
Value,
Net Current Asset Value,
Net Quick Stocks,
Strategy Tagged Negative Enterprise
Value,
Net nets 8 Comments
Our
current business
strategy is to enhance stockholder
value by pursuing opportunities to redeploy our
assets through an acquisition of one or more operating businesses with existing or prospective taxable earnings that can be offset by use of our
net operating loss carry - forwards («NOLs»).
NCAV
strategy (buy companies with at least 1/3 discount to its»
net current asset value (total
current assets — total liabilities)-RRB- is arguably the defining
strategy of Benjamin Graham (old school
value investing), and SpinOffs
strategy is arguably the most well known
strategy from Joel Greenblatt (new school
value investing).